1st Edition

Beyond Utopia Japanese Metabolism Architecture and the Birth of Mythopia

By Agnes Nyilas Copyright 2018
    238 Pages 85 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    238 Pages 85 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Megastructure proposals by the Japanese Metabolism group are commonly identified with the concept of utopia. Beyond this partial understanding, Agnes Nyilas suggests that rather than being merely utopian, the Megastructure of Metabolism represents a uniquely amalgam genre: the myth camouflaged as utopia. Although its Megastructure seemingly describes a desirable future condition as utopia does, it also comprises certain cultural images rooted in the collective (un)conscious of Japanese people, in accordance with the general interpretation of myth. The primary narrative of Beyond Utopia thus follows the gradual unfolding of the myth-like characteristics of its Megastructure.

    Myth is dealt here as an interdisciplinary subject in line with contemporary myth theories. After expounding the mechanism underlying the growing demand for a new myth in architecture (the origin of the myth), Part I discovers the formal characteristics of the Megastructure of Metabolism to give a hint of the real intention behind it. Based on this, Part II is a reexamination of their design methods, which aims to clarify the function of the myth and to suggest the meaning behind it. Finally, Part III deals with the subject matter of the myth by disclosing the meaning unfolding in the story, and suggests a new reading of Metabolism urban theory: as an attempt to reconsider the traditional Japanese space concept.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgement
    Foreword
    Author's Preface
    INTRODUCTION: The origin of the myth - THE AGONY OF MODERN ARCHITECTURE
    PART ONE: THE UTOPIA OF MEGASTRUCTURE (The myth camouflaged)
    Megastructure Proposals by Kiyonori Kikutake
    Megastructure Proposals by Kenzo Tange
    PART TWO: The Function of the myth – CITY AS ‘LIVING SYSTEM’
    Introduction to Part Two 
    Properties of ‘Living systems’ in Kikutake’s and Tange’s Megastructures
    Properties of ‘Living systems’ in Kurokawa's Megastructures
    Properties of ‘Living systems’ in Kawazoe's discourse
    PART THREE: The Subject Matter of the myth – CREATIVE TRADITION
    "Overcoming Modernity"
    The "tradition debate" in Architecture
    Traditional Japanese conception of urban space
    DENOUEMENT
    Appendix
    Postscript

    Biography

    Agnes Nyilas was an Assistant Professor at Sugiyama Jogakuen University in Japan. She received a combined BArch + MArch degree in architecture from Technical University of Budapest, Hungary and a PhD in architecture from Nagoya University, Japan. Her research interests ranged from architectural design practice to the history and theory of architecture and urban design, with a special focus on modern and contemporary design theories.