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/// DESIGN STORIES / Interview with Shigeru Ban                                   Interview with Shigeru Ban / DESIGN STORIES ///



          You've been called the "emergency architect". Do you agree   Don't they risk collapsing or being blown away in a storm?
          with this nickname?
                                                                 S. B.: No. Tube structures are rigorously designed to guarantee
          Shigeru  Ban:  The  names  people  give  me  aren't  important;  it's  stability  and  safety  with  the  appropriate  maintenance.
          what  I  do.  I  work  on  humanitarian  architectural  projects  and  I  They undergo  special  treatments  to  make  them fireproof and
 SHIGERU BAN  bring  aid  solutions  in  the  wake  of increasingly complex  natural  waterproof.
          and human disasters.
 Essential  How did you discover that cardboard could be used successfully   Temporary but lasting. Is that compatible?
          in architecture? What are its main qualities?          S.  B.:  Of course.  Even  a  permanent  building  will  fall  into  ruin
                                                                 if it's not loved. On the contrary, a temporary construction can
 ARCHITECT  S. B.: It all began in 1986, when I first used carton tubes for the   become  long-lasting  if the  occupants  and  population  at  large
          staging
                                                  Alvar
                                           designer
                                                                 are proud of it. This happens with some of my designs, like the
                                                       Aalto.
                                        the
                     exhibition
                of an
                                     to
                             dedicated
                      big
                         enough
                                budget
                    a
          I
           didn't
                have
                                      to
                                                     wood.
                                                           It
                                                                 paper school in Chengdu, China, which has withstood a number
                                                   in
                                        do
                                           the
                                              decor
          was
                                          realized
             he
                                        I
                 was
                        started
                    and
                                                                 constructed in 1995 in Kobe, Japan; then bequeathed to Taiwan
                                                 indispensable
                                     it.
          material who  suggested  carton  tubes. Today,  it  is how  solid  the  of earthquakes  over  the  past  decade;  and  the  Catholic church
                              studying
          when building temporary homes and bringing aid to countries hit   where it still stands today.
          by natural  and  human  disasters  like  Haiti,  Rwanda  and  Japan.
          The tubes are cheap, recyclable, easy to assemble and available
          across the globe. It's hard to find fault with them.
 A  MILLION  MILES  AWAY  FROM  FETED  "EMPHATIC
 BUILDER"  ARCHITECTS,  SHIGERU  BAN  IS  VERY
 DISCREET  FOR  A  WINNER  OF  THE  PRITZKER
 PRIZE  (FONDLY  CALLED  THE  "NOBEL  PRIZE  FOR
 ARCHITECTURE  -  HE  WON  THE  2014  EDITION).
 NOW  A  MASTER  IN  THE  DESIGN  OF  INNOVATIVE
 STRUCTURES,  HE  PROPOSES  PROJECTS  IN  100%
 RECYCLABLE  ORGANIC  MATERIALS.  WOOD,  PAPER,
 CARDBOARD… A USEFUL DISRUPTION IN CITIES THAT
 ARE  STILL  TOO  OFTEN  RULED  BY  AN  EMPIRE  OF
 22  STEEL AND CONCRETE.                                                                                               23
 Paper Taliesin
 Born in Tokyo in 1957, Shigeru Ban has always designed projects with
 the  sensitive  eye  with  which  he  observes  his  nearby world,  that  of
 the overpopulated Asian megacities. Inspired by traditional Japanese
 houses, with their modular paper partitions, he injects movement into
 spaces. He creates mobile, demountable, often ephemeral structures,
 open to the outdoors, highlighting a poetic notion of fluidity.
 He designed the Japan Pavilion at Expo 2000 in Hanover, composed of
 recycled-paper tubes crowned by a ceiling of wooden arches. He has
 built numerous "emergency shelters" in Asia and Africa, from organic                     Paper Taliesin
 materials, either found on-site or recycled, to bring aid to victims of   Cardboard Cathedral, Christchurch  Paper Concert Hall, l'Aquila
 climate  disasters  or  political  refugees.  In  France,  he  designed  the
 famous  roof of the  Centre  Pompidou-Metz and  partnered  architect
 Jean de Gastines in the restoration of the Île Seguin, with its glowing
 new flagship "La Seine Musicale", a model of eco-friendly construction
 in the western suburbs of Paris.
 As  the  planet  groans  and  beseeches  Homo  economicus  to  reduce
 his  environmental  footprint,  Shigeru  Ban's  buildings  are  endowing
 architecture  with  a  virtuous,  responsible  and  humanist  logic.  An
 "essential" architecture.
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