Features a wide-ranging selection of projects spanning across three decades, which reflect true architectural innovation
Shigeru Ban's awards include thePritzker Architecture Prize (2014), the World Economic Forum Crystal Award (2015) and the Auguste Perret Prize for Technology Applied to Architecture (2011)
Includes plans, illustrations, sketches, diagrams and rich photography throughout
Showcases truly unique work, such as the famous Cardboard Cathedral in post-earthquake Christchurch (NZ) and Paper Log Houses
Shigeru Ban, the Tokyo-based winner of the 2014 Pritzker Prize for Architecture, is one of the world s most prolific international design and architecture practitioners. This beautifully illustrated book features an array of his work, from commercial and residential innovation strategies to humanitarian projects, such as emergency shelters made from paper. His visionary residential design philosophies encompass hybrid timber structures, such as the tallest hybrid timber structure in the world, in Vancouver. A must-have for serious aficionados of modern architecture, innovative thinking and design.
Born in Tokyo in 1957, Shigeru Ban began by working for Arata Isozaki & Associates in Tokyo in the early 1980s. In 1985 he founded Shigeru Ban Architects in Tokyo. His work is prolific, and he has become unparalleled as an industry peer his work achieving a significant number of awards over the course of his career. He established the NGO, Voluntary Architects Network (VAN) in 1995. He has also consulted for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). He's held multiple high-ranking academic posts, namely for the architecture and design faculties at Tama Art University (1993-95); Yokohama National University (1995 99); Nihon University (1996-2000); Columbia University (2000); Keio University SFC (2001-08); Harvard University (2010); Cornell University (2010); Kyoto University (2011); and most recently with Keio University SFC (2015 -present). In 2004 he became an Honorary Fellow at the American Institute of Architects (HFAIA), and gained an International Fellowship at the Royal Institute of British Architects (IFRIBA) in 2005, when he also became an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters at Amherst College; in 2006 he became Honorary Fellow of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (HRAIC). From 2006 to 2009 he was on the jury of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, and between 2009 and 2014 he gained two Honorary Doctorates from the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and Cooper Union, respectively. In 2014 he also became Honorary Member of the Japan Institute of Architects, and was selected for the Laureate of the 2014 Pritzker Architecture Prize.publiarq.com