Current:Home > InvestRiken Yamamoto, who designs dignity and elegance into daily life, wins Pritzker Prize -ProsperityStream Academy
Riken Yamamoto, who designs dignity and elegance into daily life, wins Pritzker Prize
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:42:26
The bespectacled architect smiled from his white-walled office in Yokohama.
"I'm very proud," he said in English, of winning the 2024 Pritzker Architecture Prize. Sometimes called "the Nobel of architecture," the award has gone to such icons in the field as Philip Johnson, I.M. Pei, Renzo Piano, Rem Koolhaas and Zaha Hadid since it was established in 1979.
Japanese architect Riken Yamamoto was born in 1945 to civilian parents in Beijing, China. His engineer father was part of an occupying workforce. When the family moved back to Japan in 1947, it was to a Tokyo that had largely been reduced to rubble in the last days of World War II.
"My father made my family house by himself because there [were] no houses ... and many people made their own family houses by themselves in Tokyo," he remembered. "Tokyo was nothing [after the] bombing by the Americans. This was a double-story house, very small, very poor wooden house."
When the boy was only 4 years old, Yamamoto's father died. The family moved to his mother's hometown of Yokohama, where she opened her own business, a pharmacy. His postwar childhood spent watching a country rebuild, he says, informed his fascination with the relationship between architecture and community.
"Riken Yamamoto has really spent his entire life creating architecture that, I would say, connects the dignity of architecture with human social conditions in a very generous, quiet way," Deborah Berke told NPR. A Pritzker Prize jury member, she's also dean of the Yale School of Architecture.
"He does public buildings that feel as though they belong in the communities in which they sit," she continued. "They enrich the lives of those communities. It's not just fancy buildings. Although he does beautiful, "fancy" buildings like museums, he also does housing and fire stations and city halls. So, buildings that serve their communities. They're not necessarily monumental. They're really about bringing dignity to everyday life and elegance to everyday life."
Soon after graduating from Nihon University and earning a master's degree at Tokyo University of the Arts, the young architect founded his practice, Riken Yamamoto & Field Shop, in 1973. He traveled widely, observing living conditions in Brazilian favelas, coastal homes along the Mediterranean and communities in India, Iraq and Nepal. He investigated how people created thresholds between public and private spaces, and made systems of community visible.
He said the ancient city of Ceuta, on the northernmost tip of Morocco, inspired him to create the interconnected alleys and plazas of Beijing's Jian Wai SOHO complex — a gleaming cluster of condo towers, boutiques and restaurants.
The architect is responsible for numerous buildings in China, Korea and Switzerland, but much of his work is in Japan. His firm designed Tokyo's Fussa City Hall, seemingly wrapped in a powerful curving grid of squares. Deborah Berke says one of her favorite buildings is the bayside Yokosuka Museum of Art.
"What was incredible for me when I was there — and I was there with my family — was witnessing the kind of joyousness of everybody who was there, old people, young people, families, people alone to see the art," she told NPR. "That experience for me, somehow, was its welcomingness. Nice for activities from the youngest to the oldest, and allowing you as a visitor to feel part of something larger. That was magical for me."
One of Yamamoto's most magical buildings might be the transparent firehouse he designed in Hiroshima. "The place is especially popular with children," the architect allowed. "They like to see the fireman training."
It's covered in glass louvres, so you can see the firefighters' activities from the outside.
In its citation, the Pritzker jury noted the intergenerational power of Yamamoto's work. "By the strong, consistent quality of his buildings, he aims to dignify, enhance and enrich the life of individuals — from children to elders — and their social connections," the jury wrote.
"For creating awareness in the community in what is the responsibility of the social demand, for questioning the discipline of architecture to calibrate each individual architectural response, and above all for reminding us that in architecture, as in democracy, spaces must be created by the resolve of the people, Riken Yamamoto is named the 2024 Pritzker Prize Laureate."
veryGood! (2575)
Related
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- American Climate Video: A Maintenance Manager Made Sure Everyone Got Out of Apple Tree Village Alive
- A year after victory in Dobbs decision, anti-abortion activists still in fight mode
- Judge Dismisses New York City Climate Lawsuit Against 5 Oil Giants
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Al Pacino Expecting Baby No. 4, His First With Girlfriend Noor Alfallah
- Sia Shares She's on the Autism Spectrum 2 Years After Her Controversial Movie
- Transcript: David Martin and John Sullivan on Face the Nation, June 25, 2023
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Olivia Holt Shares the Products She Uses To Do Her Hair and Makeup on Broadway Including This $7 Pick
Ranking
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- America’s Wind Energy Boom May Finally Be Coming to the Southeast
- Arrested in West Virginia: A First-Person Account
- American Climate Video: When a School Gym Becomes a Relief Center
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- 'Forever chemicals' could be in nearly half of U.S. tap water, a federal study finds
- Senate 2020: In Mississippi, a Surprisingly Close Race For a Trump-Tied Promoter of Fossil Fuels
- On a Melting Planet, More Precisely Tracking the Decline of Ice
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Everwood Actor John Beasley Dead at 79
Keystone XL Pipeline Hit with New Delay: Judge Orders Environmental Review
Princess Diana's iconic black sheep sweater is going up for auction
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Taylor Hawkins' Son Shane Honors Dad by Performing With Foo Fighters Onstage
Latest Bleaching of Great Barrier Reef Underscores Global Coral Crisis
Trump Admin Responds to Countries’ Climate Questions With Boilerplate Answers