Metabolism manifesto

E1045531

Metabolism manifesto is a foundational 1960s Japanese architectural and urban theory document that proposed cities and buildings as flexible, organically growing systems inspired by biological metabolism.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Metabolist movement document
architectural manifesto
urban theory document
advocates large-scale infrastructural frameworks
plug-in housing units
prefabricated architectural components
author Fumihiko Maki NERFINISHED
Kisho Kurokawa NERFINISHED
Kiyonori Kikutake NERFINISHED
Masato Otaka NERFINISHED
Noboru Kawazoe NERFINISHED
coreConcept growth and change as design principles
integration of infrastructure and architecture
open-ended urban structures
countryOfOrigin Japan
describes cities as processes rather than finished forms
fieldOfWork architecture
urban planning
genre architectural theory
urban theory
hasImpactOn high-density urban planning
modular architecture
sustainable urbanism discourse
historicalPeriod 1960s
historicalSignificance foundational text of the Metabolist movement
inception 1960
influenced megastructure movement
postwar Japanese architecture
influencedBy postwar reconstruction needs in Japan
inspiredBy biological metabolism
languageOfWorkOrName Japanese
mainSubject Metabolism (architecture) NERFINISHED
flexible architecture
megastructures
organic urban growth
urban design
movement Metabolism (Japanese architecture) NERFINISHED
placeOfPublication Tokyo NERFINISHED
proposes buildings as changeable, expandable structures
cities as flexible, growing systems
publisher Bijutsu Shuppan-sha NERFINISHED
relatedTo City in the Air concept
Marine City concept
Nakagin Capsule Tower NERFINISHED
theoreticalBasis analogy between cities and living organisms

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

World Design Conference 1960 relatedTo Metabolism manifesto