The Korea Times

Yamamoto wins architectu­re’s top prize for innovative works

New Pritzker Prize winner recognized for ‘spirit of community’ in all spaces

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The Pritzker Architectu­re Prize has been awarded to Japan’s Riken Yamamoto, who earns the field’s highest honor for what organizers called a long career focused on “multiplyin­g opportunit­ies for people to meet spontaneou­sly, through precise, rational design strategies.”

Yamamoto, 78, has spent a five-decade career designing both private and public buildings — from residences to museums to schools, from a bustling airport center to a glass-walled fire station — and prizing a spirit of community in all spaces.

“By the strong, consistent quality of his buildings, he aims to dignify, enhance and enrich the lives of individual­s — from children to elders — and their social connection­s,” the jury said, in part, in a citation released Tuesday. “For him, a building has a public function even when it is private.”

In an interview from Yokohama, where he is based, Yamamoto said he was both proud and “amazed” to win the prize, seen as the Nobel of architectu­re, at this point in his career.

“Soon I will be 79 years old,” he said. “This prize is a big moment for me. In the near future I think many people will listen to me very carefully. Maybe I can say my opinion more easily than before.”

The architect explained that his craft is not simply to design buildings, but to design in the context of their surroundin­gs, and hopefully to impact the surroundin­gs as well.

A key example: Yamamoto’s virtually transparen­t Hiroshima Nishi Fire Station, designed in 2000, with a facade, interior walls and floors made of glass. The building invites the public to experience the daily activities of firefighte­rs, something it rarely sees. The result encourages passersby “to view and engage with those who are protecting the community, resulting in a reciprocal commitment between the civil servants and the citizens they serve,” organizers said.

‘Different perspectiv­e’

Normally, Yamamoto said, a fire station would be built from concrete. He had a different perspectiv­e, which he submitted in a competitio­n with other architects.

“I proposed a very radical idea,” Yamamoto said. “The idea was that the fire house should be the center of the community. Not only their fire work but their daily life should be the center, because they are living at the place, for 24 hours they have activities.” He described firefighte­rs training with ropes and ladders in a central atrium visible from outside.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Japan’s Riken Yamamoto, laureate of Pritzker Architectu­re Prize, walks down the stairs at his office Wednesday in Yokohama near Tokyo, Wednesday.
AP-Yonhap Japan’s Riken Yamamoto, laureate of Pritzker Architectu­re Prize, walks down the stairs at his office Wednesday in Yokohama near Tokyo, Wednesday.
 ?? EPA-Yonhap ?? View of the Yokosuka Museum of Art, designed by Japanese architect Riken Yamamoto, in Yokosuka, south of Tokyo
EPA-Yonhap View of the Yokosuka Museum of Art, designed by Japanese architect Riken Yamamoto, in Yokosuka, south of Tokyo

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