For those who want to have a productive Sunday evening and understand Japanese architecture a bit more:
🇬🇧 Just a reminder that I wrote a nice article in English about Japanese social housing (those dilapidated apartment blocks from J-horror movies) and made this little video from the real apartment visits.
🇷🇺 The same article in Russian can be found right here.
🇬🇧 Just a reminder that I wrote a nice article in English about Japanese social housing (those dilapidated apartment blocks from J-horror movies) and made this little video from the real apartment visits.
🇷🇺 The same article in Russian can be found right here.
ArchDaily
The Rise and Fall of Danchi, Japan’s Largest Social Housing Experiment
Japanese mass housing from the 1960s is a cross-cultural experiment that merged Western and Soviet modernist typologies with traditional Japanese elements.
I am very glad I finally updated telegram and started the comment section here, so happy to see that some people actually read my long(ish) texts and are curious about the details. I'll elaborate on one of the comments about danchi.
Dilapidating modernist mass housing from the 1960s in Japan has all the problems of its Western prototypes except for one: in these neighborhoods there's not much crime. Social environment in Japan is quite homogeneous and self-regulating: after becoming a criminal and serving time in jail you’ll probably end up as total outcast so people think twice. There's a strong culture of "public shame" and "family disgrace"; any moral misbehavior is fatal. Some foreigners I know joke about local policemen being so bored with the absence of serious crimes that they engage in questionable activities such as placing paper warnings onto irregularly parked bicycles. Yes, most of the bicycles are registered and yes, there are paid bike parkings near every metro and railway station, but usually there're no consequences if you don't pay the fee or park in a wrong place. A bored policemen will just put a small but shameful sticker saying that next time you are invited to do it better.
Dilapidating modernist mass housing from the 1960s in Japan has all the problems of its Western prototypes except for one: in these neighborhoods there's not much crime. Social environment in Japan is quite homogeneous and self-regulating: after becoming a criminal and serving time in jail you’ll probably end up as total outcast so people think twice. There's a strong culture of "public shame" and "family disgrace"; any moral misbehavior is fatal. Some foreigners I know joke about local policemen being so bored with the absence of serious crimes that they engage in questionable activities such as placing paper warnings onto irregularly parked bicycles. Yes, most of the bicycles are registered and yes, there are paid bike parkings near every metro and railway station, but usually there're no consequences if you don't pay the fee or park in a wrong place. A bored policemen will just put a small but shameful sticker saying that next time you are invited to do it better.
You may have already noticed from the previous photos that my hotel is located not far from a small red-light district area. It is very different from the famous Kabukicho in Shinjuku: there are no high-rise buildings and it is located right in the middle of a quiet residential area, which is amazingly surreal. As you pass by quirky neon-lit windowless facades adorned with plastic statues of Venus, palm trees, fake marble panels, etc. and read detailed pricelists and teaser photos of the services offered behind closed doors, happy school kids ride their bicycles up and down the street and seem to completely ignore the silent presence of very serious men in tuxedos loitering around every establishment’s entrance. Prostitution is illegal in Japan, but the definition of prostitution in the law is quite old-fashioned — it’s extremely easy to go around the words, so now you can freely visit “image clubs”, “soaplands”, “peeping rooms”, “touch bars” and “pink salons” and get whatever your body and imagination desires and more. In the 1970s with the economic growth such services became available to the middle class men and in some companies even became a part of corporate bonding culture (a boss taking his department out for a night at a host club and paying with the company money is a completely normal phenomena). Therefore, this part of the entertainment industry is not completely stigmatized as it can be in European countries, so I guess it is rather usual here for school children to coexist with explicit banners (some are so explicit I couldnt even upload them here) and love hotels in the same neighborhood. I really want to take more photographs of the buildings’s facades — it’s the same “Western-style” commercial architecture that I wrote about before but in its most maximized form with no moral restrictions. However, the tuxedoed doormen scare me away with their deadly faces and I need more courage and training.
I haven’t left the room today so I can only share some memories. A rainy day at Okayama University campus where I found Junzo Fukutake concert hall by SANAA. One of the lesser-known masterpiece of the duo.
designboom | architecture & design magazine
SANAA places junko fukutake hall beneath angled steel roof canopies
designed by SANAA, junko fukutake hall is designed as an open and inviting space, serving as a link between the university and the neighboring community.