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Kenzo Tange, whose reconciliation of traditional Japanese architecture with modernity shaped Japan’s rise from the ashes of World War II, died of heart failure at his Tokyo home Tuesday. He was 91.
Kenzo Tange, 91, a prize-winning architect celebrated for the beauty of his structures, including stadiums for the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, died of a heart ailment March 22 at his home in Tokyo. Mr ...
The house Kenzo Tange designed for himself adn a U-shaped residence by Toyo Ito are all on show as part of MAXXI's exhibition about Japan's post-war houses. ... Kanagawa by Tezuka Architects, 2001.
A scale model of architect Kenzo Tange's now-demolished house and a full-size replica of a 16th century tea house feature in a blockbuster exhibition of Japanese architecture at the Mori Art ...
Kenzo Tange, the Japanese architect who converted the core of a barren Hiroshima into a tranquil peace park in the 1940s and 1950s, died Tuesday at his home in Tokyo. He was 91. Although he ...
Best of this new generation intent on making “something new of tradition” is Kenzo Tange, 46, who stands today at the crossroads where Japanese tradition and contemporary architecture meet ...
As a 10-year-old boy, Kengo Kuma fell in love with architecture the first time he saw Yoyogi National Stadium, ... designed by famed architect Kenzo Tange (1913-2005), ...
Discover the latest Architecture news and projects on Kenzo Tange at ArchDaily, the world's largest architecture website. Stay up-to-date with articles and updates on the newest developments in ...
In February, it was announced that Kenzo Tange’s Kagawa Prefectural Gymnasium in Takamatsu, Japan, will be demolished. Tange designed the structure in 1964. The structure had hosted local ...