• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: yokohama

'Lighthouse in Yokohama' street furniture recalls the city's maritime heritage

By Alexander Walter|

Monday, Feb 15, 2021

Exterior view of the 'Lighthouse in Yokohama' street furniture. Photo: Takeshi Noguchi.

Takanao Todo + Sekai Architects have shared with us their winning street furniture design that was completed in October 2020 in the Japanese port city of Yokohama as part of the 4th Yokohama Street Furniture Competition. The intervention aims to provide seating opportunities to the public while also remembering the city's rich maritime heritage.

Following is the project description from the design team.

Photo: Takeshi Noguchi

"Yokohama is a city of destination. The first railway in Japan connecting Shinbashi to Yokohama was opened in 1872. The first International Ferry Terminal connecting Yokohama to the world opened in 1894. All sea visitors to and from Yokohama witnessed the illuminated lighthouse beacons in the distance as a symbol of either the beginning or the end of their journey. As time has passed, Yokohama has developed into one of the largest global seaports and is a bustling city of bright lights and glittering tourist destinations, but the significance of the early lighthouses has been forgotten."

Photo: Takeshi Noguchi

"Takanao Todo + Sekai’s new street furniture aims to rekindle a sense of destination among visitors by remembering Yokohama’s historic maritime markers. The design of the furniture is a fusion of comfortable park seating and symbolic artifact. The hexagonal form and tall proportions of these benches recollect the oldest functioning lighthouse in Yokohama constructed in 1896."

Photo: Takeshi Noguchi
Photo: Takeshi Noguchi

"A pair of these tall ‘lighthouse’ benches are located as a portal astride the park’s North East- South West pedestrian avenue where it intersects with a perpendicular avenue. Those on the right of the avenue are finished in red and culminated with a red beacon light and those on the left are finished in white with a green beacon light, as a reference to the port and starboard markers at the entrance to international seaports - drawing a connection to Yokohama’s maritime heritage. At night, it is hoped that the glowing benches will assist to orientate park visitors and give the same sense of comfort and safety as their namesakes gave to maritime vessels."

Plan
Site plan

"The carcass of the lighthouse benches is formed from CNC cut 15-mm waterproof plywood and the slatted enclosure is formed from 20x20-mm hardwood with a weather-resistant coating. The benches were prefabricated in modules and bolted together on site. The lights for the standalone benches are powered by a manual hand crank generator concealed within the carcass. Construction and finishing were undertaken by almost 100 students from Seisa University, to where the furniture will be relocated after the Triennale."

RELATED NEWS Watch this poetic installation in Southern Finland dance with the elements
RELATED NEWS Five landscape art installations selected for 2020 International Garden Festival

Related

yokohama ● japan ● asia ● street furniture ● lighthouse ● competition

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

'Lighthouse in Yokohama' street furniture recalls the city's maritime heritage

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

'Lighthouse in Yokohama' street furniture recalls the city's maritime heritage

By Alexander Walter|

Monday, Feb 15, 2021

Share

Exterior view of the 'Lighthouse in Yokohama' street furniture. Photo: Takeshi Noguchi.

Related

yokohama ● japan ● asia ● street furniture ● lighthouse ● competition

Takanao Todo + Sekai Architects have shared with us their winning street furniture design that was completed in October 2020 in the Japanese port city of Yokohama as part of the 4th Yokohama Street Furniture Competition. The intervention aims to provide seating opportunities to the public while also remembering the city's rich maritime heritage.

Following is the project description from the design team.

Photo: Takeshi Noguchi

"Yokohama is a city of destination. The first railway in Japan connecting Shinbashi to Yokohama was opened in 1872. The first International Ferry Terminal connecting Yokohama to the world opened in 1894. All sea visitors to and from Yokohama witnessed the illuminated lighthouse beacons in the distance as a symbol of either the beginning or the end of their journey. As time has passed, Yokohama has developed into one of the largest global seaports and is a bustling city of bright lights and glittering tourist destinations, but the significance of the early lighthouses has been forgotten."

Photo: Takeshi Noguchi

"Takanao Todo + Sekai’s new street furniture aims to rekindle a sense of destination among visitors by remembering Yokohama’s historic maritime markers. The design of the furniture is a fusion of comfortable park seating and symbolic artifact. The hexagonal form and tall proportions of these benches recollect the oldest functioning lighthouse in Yokohama constructed in 1896."

Photo: Takeshi Noguchi
Photo: Takeshi Noguchi

"A pair of these tall ‘lighthouse’ benches are located as a portal astride the park’s North East- South West pedestrian avenue where it intersects with a perpendicular avenue. Those on the right of the avenue are finished in red and culminated with a red beacon light and those on the left are finished in white with a green beacon light, as a reference to the port and starboard markers at the entrance to international seaports - drawing a connection to Yokohama’s maritime heritage. At night, it is hoped that the glowing benches will assist to orientate park visitors and give the same sense of comfort and safety as their namesakes gave to maritime vessels."

Plan
Site plan

"The carcass of the lighthouse benches is formed from CNC cut 15-mm waterproof plywood and the slatted enclosure is formed from 20x20-mm hardwood with a weather-resistant coating. The benches were prefabricated in modules and bolted together on site. The lights for the standalone benches are powered by a manual hand crank generator concealed within the carcass. Construction and finishing were undertaken by almost 100 students from Seisa University, to where the furniture will be relocated after the Triennale."

RELATED NEWS Watch this poetic installation in Southern Finland dance with the elements
RELATED NEWS Five landscape art installations selected for 2020 International Garden Festival

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Architectural Designer

Equal Equal

Architectural Designer

Brooklyn, NY, US

Mid-Level Architect/Designer

Payette

Mid-Level Architect/Designer

Boston, MA, US

Intermediate Architectural Designer

David Smotrich & Partners LLP

Intermediate Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Professor/Associate Professor/Assistant Professor of Architecture

Harvard University

Professor/Associate Professor/Assistant Professor of Architecture

Cambridge, MA, US

Project Architect / Senior Designer

Touloukian Touloukian Inc.

Project Architect / Senior Designer

Boston, MA, US

Interior Designer | Education & Institutional Work

Berliner Architects

Interior Designer | Education & Institutional Work

Culver City, CA, US

Project Manager - Civic/Community

DAHLIN ARCHITECTURE | PLANNING | INTERIORS

Project Manager - Civic/Community

Irvine, CA, US

Architectural Designer

Build Block Inc.

Architectural Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Project Manager

Trimble Architecture

Project Manager

New York, NY, US

AutoCAD Drafter/Architectural Designer

Kari Whitman Interiors

AutoCAD Drafter/Architectural Designer

Boulder, CO, US

Next page » Loading