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Perspecta
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TOKYO CATALYST: SHIFTING
SITUATIONS OF URBAN SPACE
NORIYUKI TAJIMA
We are faced with a changed world from the late 20th century and a wealth of new
global structures. Money moves seamlessly from city to city making the worldwide
financial market the single strongest influence on any local activity.
This shift has been prompted and accelerated by the digital revolution of the
1990's. New technologies have encouraged unrelenting time-less and location-less
communication and information transfer. Asynchronous e-mail has allowed differ-
ences in time and place to disappear and the 24-hour global market or 'global city' to
emerge. It is estimated that nearly half of the world's population is currently living in
cities1 rather than the countryside of agrarian centuries past. As these conurbations
1 "At the outset of the
develop, their considerable influence upon one another continues to increase. twentieth century, 10% of the
population lived in cities. In
Only now can we begin to make sense of the enormous changes that have oc-2000 around 50% of the world
population lives in cities. Tokyo
curred in these global structures over the past decade. This episode of change has
will be the only rich city to
figure in the list of the 10 larg-
been a confusing period for urbanism; especially for those operating within the dis-
est cities." Statistics by Cline
ciplines of architecture, design and planning. Although the degree of impact that Rozenblat,
the MUTATIONS
(ACTAR, 2001)2-7.
digital revolution of the late 1990s and early 20th century has had on our social struc-
tures has become somewhat apparent, it remains unclear exactly how this emerging
virtually might affect the tactile and physical world of urbanism and architecture.
Tokyo, in this respect, is an especially interesting case.
It is quite evident that new technologies are being deployed at an increasingly
accelerated pace and that the general population of Tokyo thrives on these radical
transformations. Extreme social shifts in the utilization of these new technologies
are easily observed in the mass markets of the megalopolis. It can therefore be easily
accepted that Tokyo is not just another city, but a microcosm of the dominant aspects
of all global cities.
The vast size and massive population of Tokyo- with its immense transporta-
tion infrastructure and willing absorption of new technologies - is easily apparent
alongside the fragmented urban structures and diverse character of various districts
throughout the metropolitan region. In every aspect of Tokyo the insatiable appetite
of the global financial and commercial markets is made evident by the influence of
the telecommunication and Internet culture of today
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SvS, Hernn Diaz Alonso: cinematic effects and starts to relate with physical conditions. / So this movie that's going around is showing
series of projects that we did a year, year and a half ago that are all based on the same principle of geometric control. I mean, our work,
of course, is our form, and not shape. And because it's our form it's our geometry, and in that sense it still is a classical art problem.
I'm not so sure that we're ever going to be able to detach ourselves from it. And in that sense that's why I relate much more the work to
film effects and not video gaming, for example, which I would say is a kind of a more contemporary problem. Or in the way that someone will
NORIYUKI TAJIMA
terms of the quality and type of public space the city the reality of the surrounding physical space. Within
2 -mode is the platform for can offer
mobile phone communica-
the context of an environment generated by a mass
tions with visual browsing media oriented urban-scape, the behavioral cognition
capabilities introduced in
1 999; accessible to more than Infrastructure: City on the Move of the urban becomes drastically differentiated from
81,000 Internet sites as well
as specialized services such Tokyo is an accumulation of twentieth century urbanthe traditional modes of physical community.
as e-mail, online shopping and
banking, ticket reservations, development and as such is full of many contradic-
and restaurant advice. Users
can access the network from tions. Although it grew from a medieval city - the Information Technology: Topological Diversity
anywhere in Japan.
basic street and area layout is from the Edo period Since mobile phones became economically acces-
(1603-1867) - it has experienced all the urban sible to consumers in the early 90's, the number of
changes of modernization. A total of 30,000 kilome- users of the technology has grown exponentially,
ters of highway network and 13 hundred kilometers doubling every year. Simultaneously, wireless infor-
of railway network cover the Tokyo metropolitan mation browsing and mail systems are quickly devel-
area. Compound that with the more than one million oping together with new Internet technologies. These
cars utilizing these highways every day and the 1 1 new communication technologies have become
million daily commuters on the railways, and it is nothing short of pervasive. Today there are nearly 30
easy to see that Tokyo is a city on the move. This web million users of 'i-mode* - an advanced information
of transportation infrastructure enables and encour- system introduced by NTT Docomo, Japan's largest
ages people to move efficiently and quickly from one mobile phone company. This service transacts over
place to another, and as such this constantly chang- 300 million messages daily. People are not only free
ing and shifting existence leaves the city in a state of to phone each other from any point in the city, but
perpetual flux. can now send and receive email and search the In-
media images that continuously pour into the sur- The concepts have emerged from investigations that
rounding urban space. This urban situation creates a began in the mid-1990s and have continued through
reversed reality of individual perception. Here what today. They should not be considered continuous
is unreal has become hyper-real, even more so than concepts of static analysis, but rather are arrived at
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SvS, Hernn Diaz Alonso: distinguish beauty and ugly from the cool and the boring. / In any case, what we're trying to produce is how you
construct, when you argue that the collection of affects, you cannot do that but you can control them, you can use effects, and the way
that you produce that is in technique base. In that sense, the work, our work will operate with the tradition of architecture. / Other than
that, I think after me is Winka, so the news are coming back. This is, again, this is a series of prototypes and different kind of experiments
that we're working. Some of them will go into production, some of them will not. Most of them will not, of course. But just to, let me see
Mapping the City tool in the everyday life of a Tokyo resident. Taxi driv-
To 'know' a city, one must walk its streets; but to ers cannot memorize street names as in London, nor
'see' a city, one must disconnect from it in order to can they count the numbered street grid as in New
perceive its whole. From a distance, the skyline 'rep- York since the address system in Tokyo is adjusted
resents' the city. Its massed density is the shock of area-by-area and block-by-block. Compound this with
cognition; its silhouette the enduring mark of recogni- the fact that the numbering system for buildings on
tion. This visual character is the city's symbolic repre- a single street may be out of sequence as well. By
sentation.3 In Tokyo, it is difficult even to "know" the simple necessity, technologies such as GPS have
3 See Daniel Bell, The Cultural
city. The maze of streets inevitably confuses even the developed at a rapid pace and have been deployed Contradictions of Capital-
ism (New York: Basic Books,
most familiar pedestrians. more widely as the demand increases. No longer 1976).
Pair this with the seamless and perpetually limited to the automobile, GPS service is now even
expanding edge of the Tokyo metropolis, and the op- available in mobile phones to assist lost pedestrians.
sence of legibility that leaves the repertoire of Kevin Remote or Satellite Reality
Lynch a dated and inoperable proposition.4 Tokyo The issue of comprehending the city is analogous to 4 Kevin Lynch wrote in The
Image of the City (The MIT
simply has too many 'paths' and 'districts.' 'Edges' the experience of landing an aircraft in an unfamiliar Press, 1960) that the legibility
of an individual's spatial con-
become blurred, and the uncountable 'landmarks' city. Through tiny windows one sees the map-like
ception of the city depends on
throughout the city become indistinguishable. Physi- view of roads, boundaries and districts. From this that person's unique mental
cartography. According to
cal 'nodes' in the sense that Lynch refers to them are perspective, they seem static and lifeless; a kind of Lynch, this mapping of the
city can be analyzed using five
quickly disappearing. Only a physical map - a drawn abstract model. As one descends however, this read- basic spatial notions: paths,
districts, edges, landmarks,
cartographic projection - can give us an opportunity ing becomes increasingly detailed. Each small ele- and nodes. In Tokyo there is
a different yet commensurate
to clearly comprehend and visualize the city. This ment enlarges; trees and cars and people come into set of elements that offer an
AFTER URBANISM / 83
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SvS, Hernn Diaz Alonso; what we have over here - I mean, if many of these techniques of fabrication are shared to what some of the stuff
that David and Mark were showing, so is irrelevant to talk for me about that. / And at the end I think it has to do again, maybe, to - the
ultimate ambition, I think, is to try to detach our work from some of the traps or cages that architecture has been trapped in, this kind
of moralistic searching for meaning. In that sense, we have a much more playful attitude, and I think it has to do again maybe with a little
bit lack of respect for Architecture with a capital A, and in that case if I offend some of you, I'll apologize, and I'll leave it up to
NORIYUKI TAJIMA
her comprehension of the city. This brief understand- these salary men are trapped in trains with the swell-
ing and conception is exchanged for vast spaces, new ing crowds of their unknown counterparts.
aromas and sounds, indistinguishable announce- While their working community is the offices
ments and the forward rush of people. Everything within the central business district of Tokyo, their
happens simultaneously and then instantly the city suburban hometown is termed a 'bed town' - utilized
you thought you had so easily grasped, disappears. only for sleeping and recuperation. This scenario has
The city proper is now out of sight. Perhaps even resulted in the complete loss of local community,
more familiar, a similar experience is encountered with unknown and anonymous neighbors on the
on the Internet. A user has access to millions of web trains and in their bed towns the norm. Whether it is
the Internet as a whole. Instead, people must rely on along the commute to and from the office, the salary
indexes and search engines to traverse the space of man mentally isolates himself from the surrounding
the web. context until he reaches his destination. It is upon
I would argue that urban experience resides upon People no longer expect social and communal
imagination, allowing individual cognition to bridge exchanges in the urban and public space of Tokyo,
between the scale of the map and the scale of expe- but they get it back in the office or at home utiliz-
riential perception. Obviously, the context of immedi- ing media and communication systems such as the
ate physical surrounding cannot give you the entire television or the Internet. Such an inversion means
image of the city whole, therefore a map or a satellite 'public domain' for contemporary residents of Tokyo
view must serve as an aid in the actual comprehen- doesn't exist within the actual public space of the city,
sion of the city. This correlation is what I call a satel- but somewhere within the buildings or houses that
lite body: the missing physical relationships to the define these spaces. The urban and social condition
city and in turn a reliance on the remoteness of the of Tokyo has become wholly reversed from the tradi-
city through a prosthetic or satellite view. tional hierarchy of urban public space. Urban design
The phrase 'public domain' is often used to describe it once did. People may physically be in these public
the open space of the Internet today. However, I spaces but they remain isolated, losing their actual
would like to use this phrase for describing the physi- relationship to the 'public'.
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SvS, Hernn Diaz Alonso: Winka now to bring back a serious
condition of architecture. / Thank you. / Michael Speaks:
Thank you, Hernn. We have a quick, quick, very, very
quick techno switch from PC to Mac, and then Winka' s going
to show her work. / Winka Dubbeldam: Okay, can we turn the
in the public buildings of each district. This new longer suggests a close relationship between groups
technology was seen as a public gateway to the other of unrelated individuals, but rather now connotes
districts of the city and was mainly used for official something more anonymous. Community is no lon-
purposes. When telephones became widely available ger based upon physical or geographical proximity,
for individual homes during Tokyo's period of high but something different. Urban space in Tokyo has
economic development, they were positioned next to emerged into a kind of 'masquerade' utilizing various
the main entrance of the house to designate a form of forms of communication to convey a constructed
significance that reserved the technology for guests reality much in the same way role-playing computer
and important occasions. This deferential pattern of games such as Multi User Dungeons (MUD) allow
use surrounding the telephone persisted up to and participants to establish and change synthetic or false
throughout the 1970's. personalities.
notion of telecommunication became'completely dis- lustrates this condition. Ikebukuro is one of the
engaged from any relation to actual physical space. major stations of the Tokyo subway. The urban space
People simply began to use the (mobile) telephone around the station is a public square designed by the
as an on/off button, controlling personal and private respected Japanese architect Yoshinobu Ashiwara
zones within all urban spaces. who conceived of the space as being something
AFTER URBANISM / 85
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SvS, Winka Dubbeldam: light down? It actually works. / So thank you, Hernn,
that I come with a tasking. I was actually thinking as you were talking there
was a French surrealist who said the man who could not imagine a horse
galloping on a tomato is an idiot. / And talking about that, I thought what
was interesting about it, after all, is that it would be nice to show a project
along the lines of the Roman Forum. The square has HINGED CONDITION
cause of its quality of public space but because of its Urban space (and its associated functions) has lost
reputation as a date-hunting field. Though it is speck- its original form and has taken on hybrid structures:
led with skateboarders, as few practicing dancers and Skate-boarders use handrails for their special board-
swarms of indifferent businessmen passing through, ing techniques, while homeless people regularly
its primary distinction are the numerous groups of occupy entrance canopies as sleeping spots. Alterna-
boys and girls concentrating on their telephone text tively, a young group of teenagers uses the mirrored
messages, steadily ignoring each other. What is so in- glass faade of high tech buildings for their dance
teresting about this situation is that while these teen- practice. These unconventional uses and users of
agers hesitate to talk to strangers they are comfort- urban spaces so often exceed the intended that they
able finding seemingly anonymous partners through frequently alter or confuse the expected social divi-
e-mail or chat rooms. Only after locating a possible sion and hierarchy of the individual space.
partner on the net, do they feel confident enough to Observing this tendency and thinking about what
try communication with a real person face to face. has changed within people's cognition of space,
Without the specific circumstances of a theatrical it seems that the traditional understanding of the
play or art performance, people no longer share their relationship between design and function has been
public environment and enjoy its synchronous com- disregarded. People no longer appreciate the modern
munication. There is so much individualized media aesthetic of singular expression, but rather enjoy
that a dislocation between the individual and the expanding the possibilities of a design through its
public realm is continuously observed: one person utilization as a receptacle for various, unexpected
reads a newspaper or a magazine, the other talks on uses. This reading of urban space can be seen as an
a mobile phone, another is watching a large TV moni- adaptation of the machine age understanding of an
tor screen set in the faade of a commercial building, object or artifact.
and yet another person passes by listening to music The computer is presently understood as a com-
on a Walkman. Even in an automobile, satellite navi- plex mechanic device contained within a simple box
gation and pre-paid toll systems have removed the that is capable of running many types of software
need for direct person to person interaction. Unless for various purposes. Keyboard buttons are not a
they are canvassing the streets looking for a sale, it is direct mechanical input for their functions and as
rare that the contemporary city dweller can appreci- such have little visual connections to the computer's
ate the nearly complete loss of adjacency in public fundamental internal processes. Like the machine
space. With very little being shared, everyone now itself, the computer age understanding of the 'object'
lives on a different plane.
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SvS, Winka Dubbeldam: which was an afterthought, a thought which came when I got a question from a gallery in New York, in Chelsea, a
Frederieke Taylor gallery, to do an exhibit, and I always had this huge problem with framing architecture drawings. Maybe I also have a
problem with seriousness sometimes. And so what was then the thought was is to sort of rethink maybe a project we actually just completed,
which was a house upstate in New York. Henri Bergson once said he never solved a problem that creates an interesting problem. And I guess
we did that here, because in my light mode I said to Frederieke that I would like to do a real'-time interactive holographic presentation,
is ambiguous. Actual functions are hidden within a other. Every single event or situation can be seen at a
sealed container, rendering the object itself simply glance - a section, of the whole sequence - and they
a system for running any application or software; a combine to create another new event or situation
kind of open space prepared for various uses. within the individual's collective memory.
Shifting Space and Cognition into solving some of the problems of urban space
I would like to use the term "hinged condition" as a today. People tend to shift their focus from one
strategy that attempts to connect the 'above analy- media to the other: from television to their mobile
sis - satellite body and public domain - back to the telephone, to the Internet. Physical and synchronous
physical design of urban space. Th phrase 'hinged experience is just another one of the 'media' to which
condition' came from a primary investigation of the city dweller is now exposed rather than the pri-
self related to the perception of the space? These ideas of new urban spaces are well represent-
These propositions came from a constructed ob- ed by WEST 8's Schouwburgplein project in Rotter-
ject that was used to explore the notion of a 'hinged dam. This project is a simple platform for activities 6 This was a model made
to examine the architectural
condition'6 made in 1993. This model is a chunk of that utilizes a variety of surface materials to create the concept of sequential percep-
tion as a part of my work at
cast plaster within which a crumpled sheet of black suggestion of choice. The crane-like objects flanking the Architectural Association
in London. A black crumpled
paper was embedded. This block was then sectioned one edge of the plaza are made to appear functional
paper was placed inside a
and hinged as a book. The simple artifact offers a - suggestive of the coming moments of movement. liquid plaster cast. When hard-
ened, it was cut, section by
hybrid and alternative translation of the architectural However these mechanized towers act simply as section and hinged together as
if a book. Reading or looking
and urban situation. Turning the sections of this lights, intended to be operated by the residents of at it becomes an interesting
mental journey. The black lines
artifact allows the holder to mentally travel from one Rotterdam and the users of the park. Like the light of the sectioned paper have a
memory of liquidness before
moment to the next, from one story to the other. cranes, the bench on the east edge of the plaza is the plaster hardened. With
each turn, you can actually
The experience of walking through a city is analo- suggestively literal in nature. Designed to be sat upon
travel the volumetric depth of
gous to this experience of the hinged object. There from both sides, it has a kind of abstract expression the crumpled paper hidden
within the visible slice of the
are always several events going on simultaneously - like every element in the plaza -that suggests a cer- section. Sequence becomes a
three dimensional imagination
while the walker shifts his attention from one to the tain freedom in interpretation by its users. The con- of space.
AFTER URBANISM / 87
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SvS, Winka Dubbeldam: which was real-time, activated and holographic, which in the end I found out is completely
impossible. So that became an eight month ordeal to figure out how to do that, and in the end, actually, as you can see
here, we did manage to get close to something which was that. / Now, the way this actually originated was what you see
below there, which I'll show right over here. It started in something which we called the armature, which was a
generative piece. A house designed from the inside out. And we configured it in the way that we separated hyperactive
NORIYUKI TAJIMA
C-house designed by restaurant or dining room for the word. This system represents an urban field that
Toshimitsu Kuno, Nobuyuki the owner's private guests.
Nomura + tele-design This The top floor can be used as is perhaps closer to the original idea of city than the
house accompanies a kind part of the restaurant or as the
of new style restaurant or a owner's private sitting room.
current physical manifestations. In a conurbation as
guesthouse, located in a midst The concept for the project
large as Tokyo, people's communicative behavior is
of a residential area in Tokyo. emerged from the idea of
The private portion of the "hinged condition" that here almost completely reversed from that of a place like
residence is created by the provides an alternative shift of
floating box. The alternative spatial functions and reversed ancient Rome or even 20th century New York. People
public space surrounds this public space. (See photo on
volume as if wrapping it. Half page 91 .) quite freely chat on the net, but rarely on the street.
the basement space is the
As we observed in the Ikebukuro 'date- hunting'
square, the youth of Tokyo have already begun taking
text provided by the designer provides the catalyst advantage of this emerging condition of dual commu-
for various activities in the space without specifying nication.
the stipulations of each function. The study and design of office space can expand
this realm of urbanism. Today urbanity is no longer a
tele-urban ism local issue but rather global, as I mentioned in the be-
Our architecture and urban design team is named ginning of this text. Global networks and markets are
'tel-design.' Conceived of around the idea of tele- more dominant than any of the local matters of a city
communication, our 6 core members aim to design as we see the simultaneous expansion of capitalism
architecture and urban spaces for the emerging com- and its affiliated markets with the continuing growth
7 tele-design was established munication society of the 21st century.7 and expansion of cities like Tokyo. IT communication
in 1999. Core members are;
Noriyuki Tajima, Chikara In 2000, the office became a research subject for tools are quickly developing to accommodate the fast
Matsuba, Kentaro Yamamoto,
Tosimitsu Kuno, and No- an information technology (IT) related experiment changes of the evolving business structures driving
buyuki Nomura. The office's
conducted by Context Aware Messaging Service.3 this development.
ideological aim is to develop
new ways of working and col- The technology involved in this experiment was a What is interesting here is that IT engineers and
laborating among architects,
designers, and urban planners. kind of urban and business groupware in which each developers producing these technologies are not sat-
8 CAMS is produced by
participant is in possession of a mobile phone and isfied in these emerging components being isolated
Yasuto Nakanishi of the
Graduate School of Informa-
a small handheld computer (personal digital assis- from their physical context. For them, this separa-
tion System, University of tant - PDA) , both of which are connected to a server tion represents too much of the 'real versus virtual'
Electro-Communications. It is
a dynamic messaging delivery computer that controls and adjusts group communi- dichotomy. They are instead striving to reestablish a
system using location and
schedule information. More cation. The location and schedule of each member is connection of physical location with activity through
details can be found at http:
//nakal . hako.is.uec.ac.jp/ always shown on the PDA so that the system is able these technologies; stepping into the realm of space
papers/CAMShuc2k.pdf
to define the relative position of all other members in and time that are the traditional domain of architec-
the network. The server also monitors the business ture and urbanism.
situation according to the registered schedule and In 2001, tele-design participated in an invited
automatically chooses the ideal mode of communica- competition to design a new world headquarters for a
tion such as direct phoning, recording, or e-mailing. leading global IT company. The brief for the com-
This simple device had an enormous impact on the petition outlined two contradictory demands for the
way we thought and worked. The sense of sharing structure of the space.
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SvS, Win ka Dubbeldam: functions and studied the performance of those hyperactive functions, and separated from all the kind of more lazy
functions in the house. So deactivated the rest of the house in order to do two things. One, to kind of create a set of overlapping zones,
but also we thought that that armature, which then kind of was this hyperactive unit, would be kind of a set of efficiencies but also become
kind of the generator of the kind of set of zones, which then decided to reconfigure this domestic space. / So rather than thinking of a
house as kind of a hierarchy of hallways and rooms, we started thinking of it as something which actually now became a generator. And you'll
TOKYO CATALYST
AFTER URBANISM / 89
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SvS, Winka Dubbeldam: see an exploded view on the bottom of the house there where actually the armature is lifted out. / The house itself
is a very simple box. It's, you could say, kind of an anti-Gehry. It's super, super simple on the outside and highly complex on the inside.
And it's only highly complex because it actually performs in a certain way. So you could say here the difference is, complexity is not based
on form, but it's actually based on performance, and the idea that if we start to think like that, architecture could actually approach
kind of a level of maybe industrial design intelligence. / I think the surrealists had a similar approach we currently in architecture are
NORIYUKI TAJIMA
Bottom: Shibuya crowds Top: TEPCO Museum near glazing system utilizing highly
along the TEPCO museum. Shibuya Station, by tele- transparent glass mullions.
Its design is intended to be design. The building has an This overlay makes the LED
interactive on both the physi- LED display system that screen appear as a moving
cal and perceptual levels of we refer to as the "Urban faade of Shibuya City, produc-
communication. Screen Saver." This screen ing new relationships between
is set against circular stairs information, illumination and
and a large entrance halal. In the city,
front of the screen is a DPG
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