Thursday 27 October 2011

Tower of winds

      Toyo Ito is an Japanese architect known for creating architecture that symbolize the physical or virtual world. ToYo was born in Seoul, and graduated from university of Tokyo. In Toyo's eye, Tokyo is a city that changes in every moment, but the changes can not seen in any architecture. The way to represent changes is though lights on the electrical tower, vending machine and commercial show sign. Architecture express is present during daytime but it lost its reality into the changing lights during night time.
      The purpose of the tower of winds is to symbolize the visual complexity of Tokyo in terms of a never-ceasing, ever-changing wind. The tower is built with cylinder shape facade, yet a square inner structure carefully hiding the ventilation systems for the shopping more and subway under the gro
und. The facade is built with highly reflective glass. It reflect the the changes happening in the city during daytime. Because the surrounding environment are reflected by the glasses, it gives an illusion of the structure disappears into the environment. The tower was built with thousands of lights neon light. These light changes its speed and paten when it lights up. This symbolize the the continuity of the changes in the city at night.







Zhaoyu Hunter Chen

I.M. Pei: Moving Awast From Tradition

by Aaron Chow



I.M. Pei is a Chinese American Architect, born in Canton, China and raised in Hong Kong and Shanghai. At the age of 17 in 1935, Pei moved to the United States of America to study architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He felt the material and teaching standards were not up to par and instead spent his time studying upcoming architects like Le Corbusier. After graduating, he joined the Harvard Graduate School of Design and became friends with Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer. In the early 1980's he was the focus of controversy when he designed the glass and steel pyramid to sit in front of the Louvre. Many of his other projects have also stirred up social controversy because of his western ideology of geometry and applying them to projects in Europe and Asia.



The building I have chosen is the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong, designed by Pei. It is easily one of the most recognizable skyscrapers in central Hong Kong. The structure is supposed to resemble growing bamboo shoots, which symbolize livelihood and prosperity. The structure is made up of five steel columns, 4 on each corner and one in the center. The facade is made up of curtain walls of steel and glass. There was high controversy involved in this building over that fact that it had bypassed the consulting of Feng Shui masters on matters of design prior to construction.

It has been critisized for it's shard edges, that resemble object meant for harm. Also, the geometry of Feng Shui is very important in a building. Shapes such as squares, circles and rectangles are commonly used to arrange space, while triangles and odd shaped are avoided because of imbalance and non-symmetry.

The square lot of the Bank of China was divided into triangles, and the facade is completely made of triangles. The public has cognitive feelings about the structure because of its accumulation of negative Qi. The building is believed to resemble a metal cleaver that is facing the Hong Kong Shanghai Banking Corporation; a rival bank.


Log 2 - Fragments and textiles of the Japanese Kimono

In my previous blog post, I introduced the Japanese kimono, as well as its history and varying styles. I have mentioned that over time, the kimono has become increasingly stylized, while keeping its basic shape of flat, geometric outline. This evolution of the modern day kimono has been greatly influenced by the reconfiguration of textiles. As it is made from a single bolt of fabric cut into seven sections (two body panels, two sleeve sections, two front overlaps, and a collar), the kimono is often subject to fragmentation and reuse, through the process of disassembling and re-stitching.

The reasons for piecing together a new kimono from the remnants of an older one vary greatly; from economical reasons, to sentimental ones, as well as religious:

- Silk garments have always been regarded as a luxurious commodity, but in ancient times, they were used as forms of currency, payment and reward. They were therefore recycled rather than discarded. Although the economical reasons of reusing a garment are apparent, there are some rare instances where a kimono made from different textiles could represent wealth rather than prudence. Ex; a robe once owned by warlord Uesugi Kenshin symbolizes pretentious excess, as it is an assortment of very expensive, highly coveted Chinese brocades.

- The emotional aspect can also be a driving factor in the choice to reuse pieces of textile from an old kimono into a new one. Ex; the military elite of Japan would wear fragments of robes worn by wives as the tight-fitting sleeves of their battle garment, signifying that there may have been an emotional layer of protection and comfort.

- Garments which are made from smaller, reused pieces are generally considered less valuable, and therefore appropriate for religious use in the 16th century, due to the vow of poverty imposed on Buddhist clerics. This vow requires them to create their own garments by collecting and sewing scraps of discarded or donated fabrics into patched “kesa”. There are, however, several examples of “kesa” which were in fact made from precious and expensive silks, as many of the vestments were actually donated or used as a form of payment to the clerics for services.

During the Heian period (794-1185), the kosode (the kimono’s precedent, with shorter sleeves) was primarily used as a form of undergarment for aristocratic members, used as a layer between the body and the outer garment to absorb perspiration. As the military elite were gained power over the years following the Heian period, the kosode shifted from an inner garment to an outer one, (inside to the outside) making it a more functional and less burdensome form of dress.

Whatever the reason, and more common than not, fragments of outer silk kimono are transfigured into those of the inner garments. When textiles are reused in the inner garment, the combination of shapes and colors distinguishes its design scheme. This greatly differs that of the outer garment, which is more commonly composed of the same silk fabric. From a corporeal view, the kimono’s function has now shifted in relation to the body, as it moves from the outside back to the inside.

Wednesday 26 October 2011

Yusuhara Wooden Bridge Museum

Yusuhara Wooden Bridge Museum
kengo kuma and associates.
Kochi Prefecture, Japan
09/2011              

Modern Japanese architecture

        The Yusuhara Wooden Bridge Museum was designed by a firm called Kengo Kuma and associates. In Kochi Preferture, Japan. The firm was established in 1990 by Kengo Kuma. A Japanese Architect. Kuma was born in 1954 in Kanagawa Japan. He graduated from the University of Tokyo in 1979. And in 1990 Kengo Kuma & Associates was established. Kuma is a famous Asian architect, known for his minimalistic designs. His goal is to “recover the tradition of Japanese buildings and to reinterpret it for the 21st century”. This is evident through the many buildings that this firm has designed. They all have one thing in common and that is simplicity in the designs.
 
The museum was design so that the structure can blend into the landscape. From a top view, it looks as if the interwoven beam structure is floating in the air but it is actually supported by one central pillar with two glass structure at the end. The glass helps give the illusion that it is floating. The interwoven structure was sculpted in a triangular form so it can follow the contours of the adjacent hill and the structure beside it. The image shown at the bottom is a detail of the interwoven beams. The beams overlap each other as well as support each other. The lower beams supports the upper ones, the interlocking of the beams are what make this possible. The overlapping layers continue into the museum as well.  In the main room, as you can see the beams interlock with the central beam that does down the hall. This building is a good example of how Japanese style is still evident in Modern Japanese buildings. The only difference now is it is more minimalistic and simplified. 
                                                                                                                                                                                             Sophia Giang