- no.019
-
Inter-University Seminar House
-
Category: Accommodation
-
Architect: Takamasa YOSHIZAKA
-
Construction: Shimizu Corporation
-
Year: 1965
-
Location:
Tokyo
-
Located in the densely forested hills in the outskirts of Tokyo, is a complex of facilities for university students and faculty members. The complex offers overnight accommodations for seminars, conferences and other academic activities, and was built collectively by a consortium of universities in the Tokyo metropolitan area. Takamasa Yoshizaka designed the complex in 1965. The complex consists of several groups of wooden housing units on concrete slabs with a fan-shaped layout, a pyramidal shaped windowless central seminar house, dining and lounge facilities, a wedge-shaped main building in coarse exposed concrete finish, an open auditorium with a shell-structure roof, and so on. The entire complex is assembled to simulate an image of village-like clusters. Yoshizaka attempted to create an architectural realm that sponsors free exchange of ideas through more relaxed relationships between people with his own unique architectural theory; i.e., a unity achieved via discontinuity. Hence, this complex became a testing ground for his theory. The complex continues to preserve the original character of Yoshizaka’s design today.
-
Cultural Property Info: Tokyo Metropolitan Government-designated cultural property
-
docomomo選定年度:1999
-
地方自治体登録文化財:2017
BESbswy