Jon Jerde in Japan: Designing the Spaces Between

Front Cover
Princeton Archit.Press, Jun 1, 2000 - Architecture - 112 pages
"Jon Jerde in Japan" tells the story of the unlikely collaboration of a daring Japanese real estate developer and a freewheeling American architect in the making of the largest private real estate development in Japan: Canal City Hakata, the most important work to date by one of America's most controversial architects, Jon Jerde.

When Japanese developer Fukuoka Jisho bought a nine-acre site in the distressed center of Fukuoka, they were determined to build a project that would revive the city's heart; to that end, they called on the Jerde Partnership. Bound by this common vision, Fukuoka Jisho and the Jerde Partnership negotiated language and cultural differences, one of Japan's worst economic recessions, and numerous redesigns in a co-creative process that yielded a unique outcome.

Colorful and spirited, the project defies Japanese rules for retail development, yet Canal City has had over 30 million visitors since its 1996 opening, attracting teenagers and businesspeople alike. It is considered one of the most important architectural works of the twentieth century. Uniquely contextual yet defiantly flamboyant, Canal City Hakata serves as a model of true creative collaboration and shows what can happen when two cultures joyfully collide.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction by Richard Koshaek
5
Three The Cradle of Japan
31
Five Teleological Morphing
49
Copyright

3 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2000)

Cathie Gandel is a journalist whose work has been published in Asian Property (the journal of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan), Winds (the magazine of Japan Air Lines), Nikkei Weekly, and the Los Angeles Business Journal.

Bibliographic information