Bow Wow PDF
Bow Wow PDF
Bow Wow PDF
t o k yo
by s t eve c h o d o r i w s k y
yo s h i h a ru tsukamoto
o n pe t arc h ite c ture
s c ale
in te r r u ptio n
echoes
bo dy
s pac e
A Proj ect
On Site review 23
Small Things
The concepts Pet Architecture and Micro Public Space come up consistently in
your activities. With them, how do you feel smallness is linked to promoting
good spatial practice?
I am interested in the concept of smallness as it relates to body
consciousness a relationship between space and the body. Since
most of our basic understanding of urban space for everyday living
is very segregated, life becomes quite mechanical somehow. All the
pieces are articulated as a kind of packaged service within the city,
and if you have enough money, you can enjoy this itinerary, visiting
these packages, one by one. The body, though, is something
which tries to go beyond this controlled experience, through
inventive spatial practice. In certain places, right when the body
goes beyond this package, you can feel like you have discovered
the earth a kind of wild aspect of the living condition of human
beings. I like very much the feeling of de-packaging these services.
So if you buy a house produced by Sekisui [an industrialised housing
company] in a new suburban development ninety minutes from
Tokyo Station by train, your whole life could be packaged. But on
the other hand, in Pet Architecture buildings, which we found to
be very interesting, dont fit into this framework.
Yes, although they lack size, they retain extremely customised functions, and
also personalities.
Their time and space are not served by anyone or anything,
theyre really there, and this condition is irreplaceable. And the
participation of the real body really supports the existence of that
combination of time and space. This is quite strong for me; it
stimulates my sensibility of urban living conditions today. Our
intention was to show Pet Architecture as the foregroundI think
it is often just pushed to the background.
Do you think they play the role of urban monuments?
Yes, I think its a kind of micro-monument, a witness to the
transformation of the city. I found that Pet Architecture emerges
out of specific contexts, where new or enlarged streets cut through
old urban fabric, or, in spaces where the geometry of curving rivers
or railways encounter orthogonal street patterns. They always
appear at very unique points where these interventions occur.
In that sense, they definitely have a monumental aspect. And
people are really fond of these buildings, they become imprinted
onto individuals memories. If you ask someone to talk about Pet
Architecture in their neighbourhood, they can usually mention at
least two or three really tiny buildings . . .
Compared to an individuals daily routine, which you frame as a series of
complete packages, Pet Architecture becomes a kind of jarring interruption.
This tells of an insufficiency or incompleteness in these buildings.
But this also allows them to open to the environment thats an
important quality. They cant be closed-off systems; they must be
helped by other buildings . . . I really like the generosity of Tokyo,
which allows these kinds of structures. The city doesnt want to
clean them up, or force every building to be formal. Of course
new construction must fit to regulations, but still, they can keep a
feeling of informality . . . v
Small Things
On Site review 23