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Kengo Kuma

Complete Works

by Kenneth Frampton & Kengo. Kuma (text by)

Kengo Kuma is one of Japan's leading architects and professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo. A prolific writer and philosopher, he proposes architecture that introduces new relationships between nature, technology, and human beings. In Kuma's second monograph, forty projects are arranged according to building use, with a timely focus on those that respond to natural disasters and the pandemic, build on the importance of local communities, and address our need to come together with others.

The projects range in scale and ambition, from Japan's Olympic Stadium--where Kuma used timber from every region in the country to build the nation's largest arena--to a small community center in Yusuhara, and a fairytale museum in Denmark. Each celebrates Kuma's skill using natural materials, as he pushes them to their limits to create exciting and surprising forms. Take for instance, The Exchange, a community center in Sydney, which has wooden "threads" which wrap around the building, giving the impression of a bird's nest and the UCCA Clay Museum in Yixing, China, with an undulating organic form that mimics a mountain, covered with 3,600 handmade, clay terracotta tiles.

A substantial introduction by architectural designer Grace La considers Kuma's evolution since his previous monograph and explores the themes of his work and how they relate to the architecture world today. The projects included in this volume--stadiums and cultural centers, museums and houses, cafés and parks, temples and pavilions--have been chosen by Kuma himself as best representative of this stage in his career. None appear in the previous book.

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Pages:

352

Published:

1 Sept 2026

Format

Hardback

Publisher

Thames & Hudson

ISBN:

9780500028223

Kengo Kuma is one of Japan's leading architects and professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo. A prolific writer and philosopher, he proposes architecture that introduces new relationships between nature, technology, and human beings. In Kuma's second monograph, forty projects are arranged according to building use, with a timely focus on those that respond to natural disasters and the pandemic, build on the importance of local communities, and address our need to come together with others.

The projects range in scale and ambition, from Japan's Olympic Stadium--where Kuma used timber from every region in the country to build the nation's largest arena--to a small community center in Yusuhara, and a fairytale museum in Denmark. Each celebrates Kuma's skill using natural materials, as he pushes them to their limits to create exciting and surprising forms. Take for instance, The Exchange, a community center in Sydney, which has wooden "threads" which wrap around the building, giving the impression of a bird's nest and the UCCA Clay Museum in Yixing, China, with an undulating organic form that mimics a mountain, covered with 3,600 handmade, clay terracotta tiles.

A substantial introduction by architectural designer Grace La considers Kuma's evolution since his previous monograph and explores the themes of his work and how they relate to the architecture world today. The projects included in this volume--stadiums and cultural centers, museums and houses, cafés and parks, temples and pavilions--have been chosen by Kuma himself as best representative of this stage in his career. None appear in the previous book.

$120.00
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