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Wednesday, August 18, 2021

DESIGN OF OUR TIMES / STARCHITECT KENGO KUMA’S NEW JAPAN NATIONAL STADIUM CHOOSES RECYCLED TEMPLE WOOD OVER STEEL AND CEMENT AND ELLIPSES OVER SQUARES

Associated Press

GUEST BLOG / By Eric Margolis, Slate.com
--The Olympics, and accordingly Olympic architecture, are supposed to be triumphant. Exuberant. They emphasize spectacle, showmanship, and national pride. 

Look no further than the old National Stadium in Tokyo designed by the late Kenzo Tange for the 1964 Olympics-a dramatic, monumental design with its famous swooping, suspended roof. Or Ai Weiwei's mind-numbing Bird's Nest in Beijing for the 2008 Olympics, like a mega-cocoon for a steely monster, stretched-out steel beams zigzagging every which way. Zaha Hadid's initial design for the new National Stadium in Tokyo stunned with its futuristic, turbocharged bicycle helmet shape. 

But after Hadid's plan was deemed too expensive and Kengo Kuma was selected to design the venue instead, he set out to build the opposite of a proud, mighty stadium. In one sense it's tragic that the venue was largely empty for the duration of the Games. But it's also fitting. The stadium design, in which the 60,000 seats are colored in five different earth tones to create a forest-pattern mosaic, makes the stadium look occupied and alive even without spectators. "The mosaic design is a natural solution to the problem of no spectators at the Olympics," Kuma told me during a recent interview. "By accident, the idea is perfectly fitting the situation with COVID." But the design is also apt on a deeper level. 

While Tange's design was representative of a 1960s Japan experiencing revolutionary economic growth, the new National Stadium is built for a different era. "The new era isn't about expansion," Kuma said. "Intimacy and human experience should be the theme of the new era. My proposal is very intimate and very human." 

Kuma, 66 and possessing a casual, academic demeanor, is one of the most notable and active architects in Japan. He's best known for the Nagasaki Prefectural Art Museum, V&A Dundee in Scotland, the Dallas Rolex Tower, and now, the National Stadium. 

For these Games, Kuma created a stadium that's humble as far as mega-arenas go, designed to blend in with its surroundings and age gracefully. 

Although gigantic in size, the National Stadium is a simple ellipse created to be as short and inconspicuous as possible, and covered in greenery to best fit in with the surrounding woods of the Meiji Shrine outer gardens. The wooden beams on the roof and the multilayered shadows that they bring inside the stadium makes the interior almost feel like a forest itself. 

Creative resources were not spent on a bombastic shape, but instead on a clever design that maximizes ventilation by bringing seasonal winds into the building, as well as using local wood from all 47 of Japan's prefectures. As Dutch architect Martin van der Linden put it, the design is "definitely not iconic ‚Ķ But I personally like it very much, especially once the vegetation is blooming and the stadium will look like a large planter." 

Despite its scale, the building is classic Kuma. His broader architectural philosophy opposes 20th century, industrial, efficient, corporate architecture and strives toward more human design. I saw this philosophy on full display in an ongoing exhibit of Kuma's designs at the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo as a part of the Japan Cultural Expo. 

A self-declared enemy of boxes, Kuma strives to create architecture that brings people into a more dynamic, joyful world of walkable streets. 

"In a modern society, an intimate street can become new co-working spaces and playing spaces for children," said Kuma. Kuma envisions a city of intimate, mellow walkways and parks, rich with places to live, work, and play. Majesty of the sort usually required by the Games isn't really on his mind. 

Starchitect Kengo Kuma atop his four-level headquarters building in Tokyo.  Azure Magazine

One of Kuma's core themes-oblique angles-is premised on how humans are creatures that wander freely over the earth's varied surfaces, and aren't meant to be trapped in boxes or grids. His iconic Dallas Rolex Tower in Texas utilizes this principle to gently twist out from its foundation, creating a less oppressive high-rise building that looks just as much like terrain as it does the average skyscraper. 

Another theme, soft surfaces, can be seen in the Takayanagi Community Center here in Japan. The building is made with a thatch roof and translucent washi paper for more gentle, textured partitioning as opposed to hard walls or glass. 

"Some people think of Kuma's architecture as made to be photogenic," exhibit curator Kenjiro Hosaka said. "We wanted visitors to understand that his designs are created out of necessity." 

Far from the monument to a resurgent Japan that organizers' envisioned, Kuma envisions that the National Stadium will be a part of an era of economic contraction and human intimacy. It's a vision that runs counter to what the Olympics have been in practice in the near past. Kuma’s world is about human needs. "We all need space at the right scale for our bodies," writes Kuma, "and more room does not necessarily make our lives richer." 

The firm also observed in its study of how cats live and move showed that the cats had paths through the city that wandered and wiggled freely along the topography-the very opposite of the square, thick lines of a typical city plan. "Each cat's trajectory is free," writes Kuma, "and these are just the kind of routes we want to take ourselves in the post-COVID, post-2020 world." 

Kuma said that he sees a younger generation of architects in Japan emphasizing local and recycled building materials, lots of greenery, and sustainable designs built not for cars or industry, but for human beings. As the National Stadium goes on to be used in future sporting and cultural events in Tokyo, it won't live on as a monument to the disaster and triumph of these coronavirus Olympics, or as a harbinger of some sort of new era in Japan, but instead as one piece of a warmer and gentler Tokyo. 

"I have hope for the future of the Japanese city," Kuma said. And it's clear that this future is one that couldn't care less about the Olympics. 

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KUMA’S WAY WITH WOOD Click here.  

Kuma’s teahouse at Shaw Tower in 2017 in Vancouver, BC from where you can see the Pacific Ocean and also the nearby mountains. 



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