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MORE ABOUT: Nakagin Capsule Tower – Tokyo, Japan
MORE ABOUT:
Nakagin Capsule Tower
(中銀カプセルタワー)
16-10, Ginza 8-chome,
Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Construction Dates:
[Design Conception] October 1969 – December 1970
[Fabrication] January 1971 – March 1972
Project Team:
Structural Engineers: Gengo Matsui + ORS
Electrical Engineers: Electrical Equipment Planning Laboratory
General Contractor: Taisei Corporation
Consultants: Daimaru Design and Engineering Division (capsule manufacturer)
Building Statistics:
Site Area: 442 m2
Building Area: 430 m2
Total Floor Area: 3,091 m2
Structure Details:
Structural steel frame partly encased in concrete
Max of 140 capsule units (prefabricated)
11-13 stories including 1 basement
Material Details:
Capsule exterior: Steel with sprayed paint finish
Capsule interior: Steel capsule with cloth ceiling and floor carpet
Towers: Corten structural steel frame
Lower levels: Fair-faced reinforced concrete
Reputed to be the world’s first structure that implemented the innovative idea of capsule architecture, Kisho Kurokawa designed the Nakagin Capsule Tower based off of his sustainability concept called “Metabolism”, encasing his vision of an architectural movement representative of organic growth and restructuring within buildings.
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism and Symbiosis)
The Nakagin Capsule Tower is a “mixed-system” structure, utilizing both traditional architecture with modern technology within one entity. It is made of two reinforced concrete and steel frame pillars of asymmetric heights, both housing public utilities such as stairs, elevators, plumbing, and electrical systems (Kurokawa 105).
(photos from Beyond Metabolism: The New Japanese Architecture)
The steel frame capsules (which have been designed to be replaceable, removable, and transportable) are prefabricated in specialist factories and assembled at a plant before being delivered to the site. Each one is lifted by mechanical cranes and are attached to the tower shafts using 4 high-tension bolts (Kurokawa 106).
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa architecte: Le Metabolisme 1960-1975)
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism and Symbiosis)
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism in Architecture)
Kurokawa’s design concept focuses on how to make the most efficient use of living space to accommodate the everyday essentials of a person. He borrowed the “capsule” terminology from the aerospace industry (already aware that many spaceships have implemented the idea of efficient area-usage) and retrofitted a rectangular cabin of 8 feet by 12 feet floor space with a built-in bathroom, double bed, desk, storage spaces, TV, tapedeck, typewriter, calculator, clock radio, and a 2-burner stove (Ross 71-72).
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism in Architecture)
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism and Symbiosis)
His design was inspired by a traditional Japanese puzzle game that plays off of interwoven blocks of wood.
(photo from Beyond Metabolism: The New Japanese Architecture)
Following are floor plans of the interlocking system between two capsules (which can be used to accommodate a small family), a one capsule unit, and the bathroom.
(photo from Kisho Kurokawa: From Metabolism to Symbiosis)
Additionally, here are some small scale models of Kurokawa’s design:
(photos from Kisho Kurokawa architecte: Le Metabolisme 1960-1975)
Case study by: Tammy Pham
ARE 320K, Fall 2010
UT Austin Architecture Library Sources:
▪ Kisho Kurokawa architecte: Le Metabolisme 1960-1975. Paris: Centre Georges Pompidou, 1997. 48-53. Print.
▪ Kisho Kurokawa: From Metabolism to Symbiosis. Great Britain: Academy Editions, 1992. 61-63. Print.
▪ Kurokawa, Kisho. Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism in Architecture. London: Studio Vista London, 1977. 105-111.
▪ Ross, Michael Franklin. Beyond Metabolism: The New Japanese Architecture. New York: Architectural Record,
1978. 70-77. Print.
▪ Schmal, Peter Cachola, Ingeborg Flagge, Jochen Visscher, and Kisho Kurokawa. Kisho Kurokawa: Metabolism
And Symbiosis. Berlin, Germany: JOVIS Verlag GmbH, 2005. 44-49. Print.
Online Sources:
▪ http://www.kisho.co.jp/page.php/209
▪ http://wauidesign.com/blog/2009/12/18/nakagin-capsule-tower/
▪ http://www.archiplanet.org/wiki/Nakagin_Capsule_Tower