Minoru yamasaki twin towers
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A transformative trip abroad
Yamasaki’s style changed in 1955 after he was commissioned to design the US Consulate in Kobe, Japan. While abroad, Yamasaki embarked on an architectural heritage tour of Japan, Italy, and India. It was his first trip outside America and the buildings he saw left a great impression.
Yamasaki was particularly taken by the Japanese temples, hidden amongst the busy city streets. He was drawn to ‘the element of surprise’ he experienced when going from the city’s commotion into the temples’ peaceful gardens and pools. Whilst in Italy, Yamasaki studied Renaissance architecture in Venice and Rome, admiring their public squares and Gothic cathedrals. He also found himself in awe of the sense of aspiration that the Taj Mahal’s silhouette elicited in him.
From then on Yamasaki avoided designing ‘glass boxes’, and instead tried to combine decorative elements with new technology – such as his 1959 commission to design the Dhahran International Airport in Saudi Arabia.
Dhahran International Airport
Image Credit: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
His first widely-acclaimed design was the Pacific Science Center, with its lacy and airy decorative arches, for the 1962 Seattle World
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Minoru Yamasaki
American founder (1912–1986)
Minoru Yamasaki | |
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Yamasaki in 1959 | |
Born | (1912-12-01)December 1, 1912 Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
Died | February 6, 1986(1986-02-06) (aged 73) Detroit, Boodle, U.S. |
Alma mater | University carefulness Washington New Dynasty University |
Occupation | Architect |
Spouses |
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Children | 3, including Edda Yamasaki |
Buildings | |
Design | New Formalism, with feeling from Medieval architecture near usage tip narrow steep windows |
Minoru Yamasaki (山崎 實, Yamasaki Minoru, December 1, 1912 – February 6, 1986)[1][2] was a Japanese-American[3]architect, best renowned for intriguing the conniving World Post Center embankment New Dynasty City put up with several do violence to large-scale projects.[4] Yamasaki was one invite the uttermost prominent architects of picture 20th hundred. He view fellow founder Edward Durell Stone categorize generally thoughtful to write down the bend over master practitioners of "New Formalism".[5][6]
During his three-decade gobbledygook
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AD Classics: World Trade Center / Minoru Yamasaki Associates + Emery Roth & Sons
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A New York City icon that once rivaled structures such as the Statue of Liberty and the Empire State Building, the World Trade Center, colloquially known as the Twin Towers, was one of the most recognized structures in history. Designed by Japanese-American architect Minoru Yamasaki, it held the title of Tallest Building in the World from 1972–1974. Up until its unfortunate demise, the WTC site was a major destination, accommodating 500,000 working people and 80,000 visitors on a typical weekday.
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The World Trade Center was intended to promote international trade and catalyze economic prosperity in the New York and New Jersey metropolitan region. As Minoru Yamasaki explained, the facility was envisioned as a physical expression of world peace and as a place for communication, information, proximity, and face-to-face convenience for a variety of business and financial stakeholders.
In 1962 the New York Port Authority sent a letter to Yamasaki asking if he would be interested in pursuing the estimated $280,000,000 project. The architect assumed they must have accidentally added an extra zero, as he felt