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Tadao Ando (安藤 忠雄, Andō Tadao, born 13 September 1941) is a Japanese autodidact architect [1] [2] whose approach to architecture and landscape was categorized by architectural historian Francesco Dal Co as "critical regionalism".
Row House in Sumiyoshi (住吉の長屋, Sumiyoshi no Nagaya), also called Azuma House (Japanese 東邸), is a personal residence in Sumiyoshi-ku, Osaka, Japan. It was designed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando in his early career. It was designed without exterior windows reflecting the desire of the owner to feel that he was not "in Japan", but ...
The house was built in 2003. [2] The lot, about 65 square meters, was the property of Yoshinari Nakata. 1/4 of the land is regularly flooded by seawater. Nakata was the reader who suggested his own lot to the Brutus call-to-submission. Tadao Ando was interested by the site's limitations and its closeness to the 1995 earthquake. [3]
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In one of his latest bouts of questionable behavior, Ye bought a Malibu, California, beach house designed by Pritzker prize–winning Japanese architect Tadao Ando and proceeded to gut it to bomb ...
Phoenix Island Villa Condo & Club House is an ocean resort complex located in Seopjikoji on the eastern coast of Jeju Island. Glass House, designed by Tadao Ando, houses the Parang-i gallery. Ando also designed Genius Loci, home of the resort’s meditation hall and media art zone. Mario Botta designed the glass pyramid-shaped Club House Agora.
Yumebutai (夢舞台) literally means "Dream Stage", [4] from yume (夢, "dream") and butai (舞台, "performance stage, setting").Metaphorically "a place in which to dream", [5] the name refers to the aim of restoring the ecology of the island, [6] whose soil had been partly removed for land reclamation in Osaka.
It was designed by Tadao Ando, and contains over 130 shops and 38 apartments. The construction of Omotesando Hills, built at a cost of $330 million, was marked by controversy. [ 1 ] The building replaced the Bauhaus -inspired Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments, which had been built in 1927 after the 1923 Kantō earthquake . [ 2 ]