Kenzo Tange and the Metabolist Movement: Urban Utopias of Modern Japan
English
By (author): Zhongjie Lin
Amid Japans political turbulence in 1960, seven architects and designers founded Metabolism to propagate radical ideas of urbanism. Kenz Tanges Plan for Tokyo 1960 further celebrated urban expansion as organic processes and pushed city design to an unprecedented scale. Metabolists visionary schemes of the city gave birth to revolutionary design paradigms, which reinvented the discourse of modern Japanese architecture and propelled it through the years of Economic Miracle to a global prominence. Their utopian concepts, which often envisaged the sea and the sky as human habitats of the future, reflected fundamental issues of cultural transformation and addressed environmental crises of the postindustrial society.
This new edition expands Zhongjie Lins pathbreaking account on Tange and Metabolism centered at the intersection of urbanism and utopianism. The thorough historical survey, from Metabolisms inauguration at the 1960 World Design Conference to the apex of the movement at Expo 70 and further to the recent demolition of Nakagin Capsule Tower, leads to a definition of three Metabolist urban paradigms megastructure, group form, and ruins which continue to inspire experiments in architecture, city design, and conservation.
Kenz Tange and the Metabolist Movement is a key book for architectural and urban historians, architects, and all those interested in avant-garde design, Japanese architecture, and contemporary urbanism.
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