Abstract

Similar to its old history, Japan has a rich traditional and ethical Architecture. Based on these tenets and ethics, different concepts and spaces are formed through the time, as now Japan's ethical and traditional design ideas has its standard principles. Linking the present and the past has always been a momentous criterion in the countries with an old rich Architecture. This fact is indeed important in Japan due to the blend of ethics and religions with peoples` life. Through this idea, three Japanese Architects, Kenzo Tange, Fumihiko Maki and Tadao Ando-who are the only Japanese pritzker prize winners-have well, noticed the need for linking the country's traditional and ethical Architecture criteria with the contemporary Architecture. So, analyzing such projects of these architects prepares a good basis to find out the quality of how traditional and ethical design ideas crystallize in the works of contemporary Japanese architects. The research method for this article is a comparative analysis between the architects` particular projects and Japan's ethical and traditional design ideas, formed through the history of architecture in this country. The contents of this article rely heavily on three bases: 1) study of the historical documents concerning the ethical and traditional design concepts in Japan. 2) The consultancy of leading experts on Asian traditional constructions and ethical architecture specialists from Azad Universities in Tehran. 3) Comparative analysis between the ethical concepts applied in different contemporary works.The results show that the contemporary architects have had good bases for presenting the traditional design concepts as standard principles are all formed in the architecture of Japan today. Meanwhile, it seems that Maki and Ando are more likely to have a conceptual look at Japan's traditions while Tange has a more formal viewpoint. Chronological analysis of the architects` projects shows that despite, all the three architects were impressed by the works of le Corbusier, they were successful to keep contacts with Japan's traditional design concepts.

Highlights

  • A reversion to traditional architecture and the quality of using its principles in contemporary architecture has always been a momentous criterion in the countries with a rich architectural record

  • The results show that the contemporary architects have had good bases for presenting the traditional design concepts as standard principles are all formed in the architecture of Japan today

  • This article analyzed some projects of the three Japanese pritzker prize winner architects in order to find out the quality of how traditional and ethical design ideas crystallize in the works of contemporary Japanese architects

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Summary

Introduction

A reversion to traditional architecture and the quality of using its principles in contemporary architecture has always been a momentous criterion in the countries with a rich architectural record. Modernists ignore whatever related to the past and history while in the works of avant-garde postmodernists the issue has changed to an imitative and non-unique relationship It seems that the need for having contacts with the past, in the countries where architecture has a unique association with peoples’ ethics and traditions, is of a more importance as it has got a momentous role in forming the identity of people. The blend of these themes with the peoples’ life, in the history of Japan, has made the Japanese architects concern about the concepts of traditional and ethical architecture It seems that among Japan’s contemporary architects, Kenzo Tange, Fumihiko Maki and Tadao Ando have had a better attempt to use the traditional concepts in their works. To have a more certain conclusion the architects’ intellectual bases and their contemporaneous ideologies in the architecture of the western world- which could have influenced them- are as well considered

Japanese Religion
Concepts and principles of Japans traditional architecture
Kenzo Tange
Sample projects with traditional or ethical insight
Fumihiko Maki
Tadao Ando
Conclusion
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