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Selections from an immense new monograph about Japanese architect Shigeru Ban reveal an amazing range of forms, many of which center on the humble cardboard tube and elemental forms that allowed ...
The Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, a master of refined spectacle, once unfurled some bolts of fabric for an exhibition he was designing, then schlepped home the cardboard tubes.
Shigeru Ban, 57, won the 2014 Pritzker Architecture Prize and is known for using recyclable materials, such as paper tubes, in his designs. His works include the Aspen Art Museum and the Cardboard ...
Shigeru Ban used locally produced paper tubes for the new pavilion that will house Moscow's Garage Center for Contemporary Culture in Gorky Park.
Cardboard tubes are among the materials that Shigeru Ban used to construct the Blue Ocean Dome pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka.
The Cardboard Cathedral in New Zealand by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban is the next building to secure its place in our list of the 25 most significant buildings of the 21st century. Cardboard is ...
Shigeru Ban is a world-famous architect who uses his unique designs to help people in disaster zones.
More impressive still is the emergency housing that Ban has been designing and building in the world’s disaster zones since the mid-1990s, also using cardboard tubes.
Cardboard tubes are among the materials that Japanese architect Shigeru Ban used to construct the Blue Ocean Dome pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka, which contains exhibits by designer Kenya Hara. Ban ...