When Riken Yamamoto posed the first query, a great lot of thinking went into the project: How may these apartments, which could house 110 diverse families, be envisioned as a community? An arrangement of structures centred around an open space served as the end product. The concept of a threshold informed the room's architecture, preventing direct access to the central open space and necessitating the use of the units as gates instead.
The Pritzker Prize winner of 2024 places a high value on physical and behavioural transparency in his architectural designs. He says, "Spaces are uncovered, and they can be seen," emphasizing the significance of them being visible. In settings like these at a university, I believe it's critical to constantly consider "I can be seen." In his view, modern metropolitan surroundings frequently lack interpersonal visibility and connection, but historically, cities have been places for observation and engagement.
Yamamoto has incorporated design features including open departments allowing researchers and students to collaborate in the Future University, Hakodate (2000), and a transparent louvred glass façade displaying the building's functioning, reflecting his conviction that transparency is a symbol of functionality and accessibility.
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Text provided by Pallavi Prabhupatkar -
Being an architecture student, Pallavi believes that architecture is more than a mere physical construct, it embodies a profound emotional resonance as well. Beyond structural elements, it encapsulates a spectrum of feelings, shaping our connection to spaces. Her thoughts dive into writing, where she blends imagination and reality to tell engaging stories.