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	<title>Tom Vanderbilt</title>
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		<title>Time Capsule (Essay for Dwell on Kisho Kurokawa&#8217;s Nakagin Space Capsule)</title>
		<link>http://www.tomvanderbilt.com/2011/06/time-capsule-essay-for-dwell-on-kisho-kurokawas-nakagin-space-capsule/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Jun 2011 13:43:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Time Capsule

The impending demolition of Kisho Kurokawa’s Capsule Tower strikes a  nostalgic nerve in writer Tom Vanderbilt, who travels to Tokyo for a  look at a future that never was.
Read more: http://www.dwell.com/articles/time-capsule-essay.html#ixzz1ODifpSuY



Even as a child in 1970s suburban America, I had a firm, if skewed,  vision of modern architecture. My modernism demanded [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Time Capsule</h1>
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<p>The impending demolition of Kisho Kurokawa’s Capsule Tower strikes a  nostalgic nerve in writer Tom Vanderbilt, who travels to Tokyo for a  look at a future that never was.</p></div>
<div style="overflow: hidden; color: #000000; background-color: transparent; text-align: left; text-decoration: none; border: medium none;">Read more: <a style="color: #003399;" href="http://www.dwell.com/articles/time-capsule-essay.html#ixzz1ODifpSuY">http://www.dwell.com/articles/time-capsule-essay.html#ixzz1ODifpSuY</a></div>
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<div class="mediaContainer leadPhoto photoFunctions"><img src="http://media.dwell.com/images/478*614/kisho-kurokawa-illustration-lead.jpg" alt="kisho kurokawa illustration lead" /></div>
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<p>Even as a child in 1970s suburban America, I had a firm, if skewed,  vision of modern architecture. My modernism demanded not rational  Miesian boxes but structures whose form proclaimed the future: anything  space-related (the Space Needle—how the very name evoked modernity!);  anything that moved (revolving restaurants); anything molecular (the  Brussels Atomium); anything underground (Welcome, Mr. Bond…); and  virtually anything spherical.</p>
<p>My juvenile imagination was particularly enraptured by Tokyo’s  Nakagin Capsule Tower, built in 1972. A towering stack of prefabricated  concrete cubes jutting at myriad angles out of a central core, the  Nakagin looked more like a docking station—the mother ship of modernity  primed for takeoff. Its interior was composed of startlingly compact  white pods (under 100 square feet) whose walls were mounted with every  necessity, from a sleeping bunk and desk to a rotary phone, calculator,  and reel-to-reel tape player. The hallway doors looked like airlocks.  The sole window in each pod was circular.</p>
<div class="mediaContainer photoFunctions position1"><img src="http://media.dwell.com/images/230*649/kisho-kurokawa-illustration-peake.jpg" alt="kishokurokawaillustrationpeake.jp" /></div>
<p>I was convinced that the Nakagin was the future, not least because it  came from the proving ground of the future Japan. With its small  windows set into white facades, it even seemed to evoke the shinkansen,  or bullet train. Like the Sony Walkman, the Nakagin seemed a marvel of  miniaturization, a harbinger of a new way of living, a self-contained  cocoon. Someday we would all live in capsules, eat capsule food, digest  capsulized bits of information, make encapsulated love.</p>
<p>I hadn’t thought much about the Nakagin until a few months ago, when I  heard the startling news that it would be demolished. The building was  obsolete, it was said, beyond repair. The units leaked and were tinged  with asbestos. Its original raison d’être, that its modularity would  allow residents to replace outmoded systems with the latest  upgrades—every 25 years, ideally—hadn’t been honored. The tower’s  architect, Kisho Kurokawa, insisted that this modularity could, in fact,  save the building. Replacing the capsules would cost less than  rebuilding, he argued. But, in light of Tokyo’s rampant development and a  preservation ethos that prioritizes temples and shrines, the end seemed  imminent. I knew I had to go to Tokyo to see the Nakagin, and I quickly  made plans to meet with Kurokawa.</p>
<p>Then came more unexpected news: Kurokawa had died, at age 73.</p>
<p>I went to Tokyo anyway, with no certain plan beyond a pilgrimage to what now seemed like the ruins of my own imagined future.</p>
<p>In Japan, Kurokawa was a confirmed celebrity—the country’s “third  most famous person,” Charles Jencks once joked. A founder of the  Metabolists, Kurokawa completed dozens of major commissions, from  Tokyo’s National Art Center to the Kuala Lumpur International Airport;  hosted a television show; wrote best-selling books; and, most recently,  ran mercurial campaigns for public office. However broad his reputation  grew, though, Kurokawa could never quite escape the Nakagin Tower—he was  long known as the “capsule architect.”</p>
<p>In the context of late ’60s and early ’70s design, the capsule tower  almost seemed preordained. Long-haul space flights had introduced the  world to confined, multifunctional, technology-intensive living. In  Where’s My Space Age?, Sean Topham chronicles the capsule’s emergence as  a leading leitmotif of the architectural avant-garde. Archigram, which  extolled the “poetry of countdown,” had its Plug-In Cities and Living  Pods. In 1969, Joe Colombo unveiled his Habitation Capsule, which, like  everything else in those days, from Vico Magistretti’s Eclisse lamp to  Vernor Panton’s furniture, was heavy on the white, plastic, and  spherical. Sanyo Electric had its own prototypical white sphere, the  1970 Living Capsule, with everything one would want in a space-age  bachelor pod: bar, TV, phone, bed. Blast off!</p>
<p>But of all the prefab capsule projects swirling around, the only one  constructed was the Nakagin. That it was built at all still seems  incredible: As alluringly futuristic as capsules were, who would  actually want to live in one? Moreover, Kurokawa was just another late  ’60s wild man with a manifesto and an arsenal of fictive works-on-paper.  Metabolism, as wonderfully abstruse as most architectural philosophies,  was a sort of Japanese-influenced spin (a little more organic, a little  more Buddhist) on high-tech, imagining structures and entire cities as  biological entities subject to decay and renewal, with constituent parts  replaced as they outlived their usefulness. (“Capsule architecture,”  wrote Kurokawa, “was an architectural expression of the living cell.”)  After a decade of scheming, he designed the Discotheque Space Capsule in  Tokyo’s Roppongi district (“a capsule,” he declared, “for those who  want to release what is pent up inside them”), and then debuted two  capsule projects at the 1970 World Exposition in Osaka.</p>
<p>As a pioneering urban prefab project, the Nakagin Tower was  incredibly innovative—but also imperfect. The steel units were built in a  shipping-container factory several hours outside Tokyo, with no storage  space on site. Only units delivered that day could be hoisted up and  bolted onto the central truss. The capsules, in spite of this, were “no  cheaper than conventional rooms,” Jencks noted: “Kurokawa offers them  not as economic panacea but rather as forms for a new way of living.”  And though people compared the units to birdhouses and to washing  machines, all 140 of them (which included sheets and toothbrushes, but  not kitchens—it was assumed residents would eat out) sold within a  month. The buyers were commuting salarymen, for whom the capsules would  be pieds-à-terre; foreign corporations who wanted a cheaper alternative  to hotels; and even families simply looking for an extra room.</p>
<p>In his 1969 book <em>Homo Movens</em>, Kurokawa had envisioned a  mobile society, with people time-sharing among five or six different  environments. Like astronauts protected from solar rays, Kurokawa  suggested, “individuals should be protected by capsules in which they  can reject information they do not need and in which they are sheltered  from information they do not want, thereby allowing an individual to  recover his subjectivity and independence.”</p>
<p>When I finally made it to the tower, on the far edge of the Ginza  neighborhood, I was struck first by how small it now seems, dwarfed by  the looming high-rises on the edge of adjacent Shiodome, one of Tokyo’s  glittering new infill districts. My next impression was of the toll that  decades of weather and pollution had taken on the building: With black  streaks of rain running down</p>
<p>it like tears, the new way of living was looking rather old. Next to  the building’s entrance sat a single preserved capsule, with a sign  attached to the window meant to ward off architectural tourists:  “Because I do not open it now, this model room cannot do a visit from  inside.”</p>
<p>I took the battered elevator to the fifth floor to meet with Seibei  Yamashita, director of the building’s owners association. The hallway  was dark, with paint-chipped walls. Shoes and umbrellas rested outside  every door.</p>
<p>I found Yamashita, bespectacled and soft-spoken, in a room that  barely resembled the original photographs: Its once-white enameled walls  were painted red and green, the small black-and-white television had  been supplanted by a larger color model, and the original clock was  stuck at 5:29. A plastic owl perched in the window (to ward off Tokyo’s  many pigeons, Yamashita said). Outside, cars raced by on the Shuto  Expressway. Where every window once had a custom radial blind,  Yamashita, like every other owner, had covered his with standard drapes.  My arms outstretched, I could reach from wall to wall.</p>
<p>Yamashita bought the capsule several decades ago, as a place to sleep  three nights a week when business kept him downtown late. For years, a  series of progressively mounting problems have been plaguing the  owners—from leaks (the original weather stripping was cork) to hot water  issues to, most seriously, asbestos. The owners (many are absentee)  would have preferred to save the capsules, but the cost was such that  most voted to have the building demolished and a new, more standard  tower built in its place. Whether this is true or not, the damage was  evident everywhere: holes punched through to reveal plumbing, caulking  tracing zigzag cracks, strange innards spilling out. I asked what would  be done with the relatively pristine demonstration capsule. Surely some  museum planned to save it? He shrugged and suggested that if I wanted  it, it was mine.</p>
<p>Yamashita had told me that most people, even in space-starved Tokyo,  could no longer imagine living in such small spaces. But if Kurokawa’s  “capsulized existence” failed to take hold, notes architectural  professor Akira Suzuki in Do Android Crows Fly Over the Skies of an  Electronic Tokyo?, its DNA survives in two architecturally denuded  forms. First are the famous “capsule hotels,” those morgue-like rows of  sleep chambers for businessmen too tired—or too inebriated—to make the  long commute home. Second are the city’s “one-room mansions,”  100-square-foot units with prefab bathrooms, brutally expressive of  Tokyo’s real estate market. Suzuki argues that residents transcend their  small confines through cyberspace. “A link to huge communication  networks that spiral around us as we crouch in our tiny, atomized  spaces,” he writes. “This is what we are after.”</p>
<p>Call them myPods—residents installed in their docks, downloading  information, recharging before striking out again into the city.  Kurokawa had forecast this: The capsules were “cyborg architecture,” he  wrote, inside of which humans could “equip themselves with various  devices with which to perform complicated roles which are beyond their  capabilities as living creatures.”</p>
<p>The Nakagin’s place in architectural history is more secure than the  building’s future. “Without Kisho’s capsule building,” Jencks argues,  buildings like the Centre Pompidou and Richard Rogers’s Lloyd’s of  London “are unthinkable.” Kurokawa was asking radical questions in built  form: Could buildings renew themselves by adding new “cells”? How much  (or little) space do we need to dwell—and what does it mean to dwell,  anyway? Can architecture inspire new forms of living? His work, which  took the idea of the American mobile trailer, among others, and made out  of it an urban monument, resonates in the dreams of future-minded  architects, in everything from houses made of shipping containers to any  number of mini-living schemes.</p>
<p>The fact that the building seems set to be destroyed is strangely  poignant: Not only do we lose a sense of how the past imagined the  future, we lose a future that never came to be. Kurokawa, vocally and  publicly, called for the building’s preservation—but he was also fond of  discussing the contradictions of preservation in Japan. His own  architectural career was forged in the wreckage of Japan’s destroyed  postwar cities, and he liked to cite the Shinto shrine at Ise, which is  rebuilt every 20 years. After all, preserving the building itself was  not the point; what mattered was spiritually preserving the shrine’s  “invisible tradition.”</p>
<p>In his own writings, Kurokawa, a Buddhist, offered a fitting and,  especially now, quite haunting encomium to the capsule tower: “We used  to consider things that could live forever to be beautiful. But this way  of thinking has been exposed as a lie. True beauty lies in things that  die, things that change.”</p></div>
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