[17-07-2015] EL JAPONÉS ES UNO DE LOS PILARES TEÓRICOS DEL METABOLISMO_ Fumihiko Maki es uno de los arquitectos más respetados de Japón. Nació en 1928 y estudió e impartió clases en la Universidad …
Image 11 of 18 from gallery of Fumihiko Maki On The Importance of Conscious Decision-Making in Design. Photograph by PLANE—SITE
RNDRD | A partial index of published architectural rendering
Image 8 of 8 from gallery of Spotlight: Fumihiko Maki. Fumihiko Maki at MIT Media Lab, 2010. Image © Flickr user jeanbaptisteparis licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Tickets on sale this week to attend the Pritzker Prize-winning architect’s Australian talks in June.
Maki's Golgi Structure designed in 1968 by Fumihiko Maki was named after Camillo Golgi, who developed techniques for visualizing nerve cells
"In part to improve its corporate image, the company has recently expanded its program to include fashion, art, and music. This building is to be an active arts center for various corporate-sponsored cultural activities, and must be in itself a work of art."
ESPAÑOL Fumihiko Maki is one of the most respected architects in Japan. Born in 1928, Maki studied and taught at Tokyo University and the S...
In 1997, Pritzker Prize-winning Japanese architect Fumihiko Maki completed the Kaze-no-Oka Crematorium in Nakatsu, Japan.
Image 7 of 18 from gallery of Fumihiko Maki On The Importance of Conscious Decision-Making in Design. Photograph by PLANE—SITE
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Una de las torres planeadas en la reconstrucción del World Trade Center estará a cargo del arquitecto Japonés Fumihiko Maki. Como mencionamos en nuestro post acerca de la construcción de las torres originales en los años 60’s, aquel icónico diseño de las torres gemelas fue creado por Minoru Yamasaki, y la nueva Torre 4 marcara …
Spiral Building Arch. Fumihiko Maki, 1985 5-6-23 Minami Aoyama, Minato, Tokyo
In 1997, Pritzker Prize-winning Japanese architect Fumihiko Maki completed the Kaze-no-Oka Crematorium in Nakatsu, Japan.
STIR speaks with some of the greatest icons of our times – Fumihiko Maki, even at 91, continues to conceptualise and actively engage in humanitarian design across the globe.
Image 8 of 18 from gallery of Fumihiko Maki On The Importance of Conscious Decision-Making in Design. Photograph by PLANE—SITE
Synonymous with sweatshops and sprawl, the Chinese city of Shenzhen is banking on Fumihiko Maki’s Sea World Culture and Arts Center to legitimize its brand of unfettered creativity. Can such a sober building do the job?