Shigeru Ban
Shigeru Ban
Shigeru Ban
Biography
• He was born in the year 1957 in Tokyo.
• From 1977 through 1980 he studied at the Southern California Institute of
Architecture and the Cooper Union School of Architecture, where he graduated in
1984.
• He was apprenticed in the studios of Arata Isozaki from 1982-83 and in 1985 he
opened his own studios in Tokyo.
He teaches in a number of universities: Tama University (1993-1995), Yokohama
National University and Nihon University.
• In 1996 he was awarded the Kansai Architect Grand Prize and the first prize in the
Mainichi Advertisement Design Competition.
In 1997 he designed residential buildings in Tokyo.
• In 1999 he was commissioned to design the Japanese Pavilion for "Expo 2000" in
Hanover.
In 2000 he participated in the Venice Biennial with displays of paper homes
designed after the 1995 Kobe earthquake to house the homeless cheaply and
simply.
• His research into the use of economic materials, especially card and bamboo,
began in the '80's and still continues in the projects he is at work on today: card and
steel for a small museum in Dijon, card for four homes in Portugal and bamboo for a
number of Beijing residences.
Design Philoshopy
• Shigeru Ban Architects (SBA)'s consistent design philosophy is to create uniquely
free and open space with concrete rationality of structure and construction
method. It seeks to challenge the existing construction method by using easily
obtainable off-the-shelf materials in innovative and unprecedented
structural/construction systems.
2002 Forest Park Pavilion Prototype-Rice University Art Gallery, Houston, USA
2000 Expo 2000 Hannover Japan Pavilion - Paper Tube Structure-13, Germany
1995 Paper Log House - Paper Tube Structure -07, Kobe, Hyogo
the Curtain Wall House embodies openness and transparency between interior and
exterior. Billowing curtains are the only means of providing privacy to the residents
of the house. Without the fabric, the house becomes completely exposed to the busy
street.
Interior conditons are also controlled by opening and closing this Japanese-style
"curtain wall". In winter, a set of glazed doors (in combination with the curtain) can
completely enclose the house for insulation and privacy. This thin membrane takes the
place of shoji and sudare screens, and fusuma doors that appear in the traditional
Japanese house.
“Mies invented the glass curtain wall, but I just used a curtain”
-Shigeru Ban
Picture Window House - Shizuoka, Japan, 2002
“The first time I set foot on the site, my immediate response was to
frame the wonderful view of the ocean stretching horizontally. That is
to say that the building itself should become a picture window.”
- Shigeru Ban
The idea for this house can be clearly seen in its name and by looking at the building itself.
Building Plans
1. 2.
3.
“met the client only once, I was again considering what to do about the project of
this house, when the client sent me a facsimile making precise requests. What he
wanted was described as a house that “provides the least privacy so that the family
members are not secluded from one another, a house that gives everyone the
freedom to have individual activities in a shared atmosphere, in the middle of a
“unified family”. After reading his fax, I knew that I should take up this challenge.”
− Shigeru Ban
'naked house' consists of a large open plan, in which cubical room units can be wheeled
into various positions according to the moods and climatic desires of the occupants. The
client wanted a house with as little privacy as possible, a house which does not separate
family members from each other, but allow them space for their individual activities while
retaining an atmosphere of togetherness. Based on this concept shigeru ban designed the
transparent house container with four movable open room containers.
almost without windows, no room doors, a family of five, made up of three generations,
lives there.
Interior view of the house. Note the movable open room containers.
Exploded axonometric view of the Naked House
The external walls made of two sheets of corrugated fiber-reinforced plastics and the inner
walls made of a nylon fabric are both mounted on wooden stud frames and sit in parallel.
In between are attached clear plastic bags, carefully stuffed with strings of foamed
polyethylene for insulation purpose. Through these bags a soft diffused light fills in the
interior of the house.
Paper Architecture
Business Definition for: Paper Architecture
•an ambitious business project that never gets beyond the planning stage, because of
lack of funding or because it is not feasible
(source: http://dictionary.bnet.com/definition/paper+architecture.html )
The Pavilions has been a great leap forward in the field of paper architecture. The main
theme of the Hannover Expo was the environment and the basic concept behind the
Japan Pavilion was to create a structure that would produce as little industrial waste
as possible when it was dismantled. The goal was either to recycle or reuse almost all
of the materials that went into the building.
Night view
The pavilion consisted of an approach zone, an exhibition space 72m long, 15.5m high,
and 35m span at its widest point, and administrative office.
Honeycomb board as partitions for the interior.
Ban is always concerned with the afterlife of his structures, his design for the
Japanese Pavilion at the Hannover Expo 2000 is a particular triumph. He knew
its life there was short, so he developed a grid shell structure using his
signature paper tubes, then arranged for the tubes to be returned to
the manufacturer and made into pulp when the event finished.
Likewise, the foundation was made of wooden boxes filled with sand and ready
for re-use, rather than a more permanent and non-recyclable concrete.
Paper Log Houses - Kobe, Japan, 1995
In January 17, 1995 a magnitude 6.9 earthquake hit the city of Kobe, Japan leaving three
hundred thousand people homeless. The aftermath of the quake left the city in ruins,
destroying some one hundred and two thousand buildings.
This catastrophic event gave Ban the commission he needed to truly test his method of
building.
Elevation Section
Location :
Kobe, Japan
Date of Finished Construction :
1995
Type of Structure :
Cardboard Tubes
List of Materials :
-KIRIN beer crates
-sand bags
-13’x13’ plywood floor
-plywood pegs
-2x8 pieces of wood
-4 1/2” diameter cardboard
tubes
-waterproof tape
-tent like material
-1/4” steel rods
-plywood roofing connections
Time it takes to assemble it on
site :
less than 6 hours
People it takes to assemble :
1-20
Cost of Building :
under $2,000
Exploded axonometric view of the house
Sources:
http://www.xfaf.it. (n.d.). Shigeru Ban talk. Retrieved March 7, 2010, from
http://www.designboom.com/history/ban.html
New York Architecture Images. (n.d.). Shigeru Ban. Retrieved March 8, 2010, from
http://www.nyc-architecture.com/ARCH/ARCH-Shigero.htm
Kimmelman, Micheal. (2007, May 20). Waste Not The Accidental Environmentalist.
The Times Magazine. Retrieved March 8, 2010, from
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/20/magazine/20shigeru-t.html?pagewanted=all
Luscombe, Belinda. (2000). He Builds With a Really Tough Material: Paper. Retrieved
March 8, 2010, from
http://www.time.com/time/innovators/design/profile_ban.html