Shigeru Ban

Japanese architect to speak Feb. 29; Will lead student workshop this semester

Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, known for his pioneering use of low-cost materials such as paper and bamboo, will speak on Works and Humanitarian Activities for Washington University’s School of Architecture and Visiting East Asian Professionals Program in Arts & Sciences at 7 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 29.

CALENDAR SUMMARY


WHO: Architect Shigeru Ban

WHAT: Lecture, Works and Humanitarian Activities

WHEN: 7 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 29; Reception 6:30 p.m.

WHERE: Steinberg Auditorium, Gallery of Art, Steinberg Hall, intersection Skinker and Forsyth boulevards. Receptions in Givens Hall, just west of Steinberg

COST: free and open to the public

INFORMATION: (314) 935-6200

The event is free and open to the public and takes place in the Gallery of Art’s Steinberg Auditorium, located in Steinberg Hall, near the intersection of Forsyth and Skinker boulevards. A reception will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the School of Architecture’s Givens Hall, just west of Steinberg. For more information, call (314) 935-6200.

Ban’s work is notable for linking natural and built environments and for its economic use of resources. As a consultant to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in the early and mid-1990s, Ban created emergency housing from paper tubes for victims of the Rwandan civil war — designs that later were redeployed for victims of the 1995 earthquake in Kobe, Japan. Light, environmentally friendly and easy to transport, store and recycle, these structures featured card walls, foundations of sand-filled beer cases and ceilings and roofs of tenting fabric.

In the United States, Ban is perhaps best know for his Curtain Wall House in Tokyo, a highlight of the Museum of Modern Art’s 1999 exhibition The Un-Private House. Other projects include a small museum in Dijon, France, constructed of card and steel; four homes in Portugal, also employing card; and a series of bamboo residences near the Great Wall in Beijing.

Born in Tokyo in 1957, Ban studied at the Southern California Institute of Architecture and the Cooper Union School of Architecture, where he graduated in 1984. He opened his own Tokyo-based practice the following year. Shigeru Ban, the first English-language monograph of his work, was published in 2000 by the Princeton Architectural Press.

While on campus, Ban will begin a series of workshops with architecture students that, over the course of the spring semester, will develop a publicly scaled temporary construction outside Givens Hall. The project follows last semester’s residency by master carpenter Tamotsu Edo of Awajishima, Japan, who worked with students to construct and install a traditional Japanese teahouse waiting bench, or koshikake machiai, in the university’s Elizabeth Danforth Butterfly Garden.