Sendai Mediatheque

Sendai Mediatheque
General information
Type Library
Town or city Sendai
Country Japan
Construction started 17 December 1997
Completed 10 August 2000
Opened 26 January 2001
Cost ca. 13 billion yen
Height 36.49 m
Technical details
Structural system steel-ribbed with partial reinforced concrete
Floor area 21,682 m²
Design and construction
Architect Toyo Ito
References
[1]

Sendai Mediatheque is a library in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. It was designed by Toyo Ito in 1995 and completed in 2001.

History

The Sendai Mediatheque held its official opening on January 26, 2001, however the initial impetus for the project began as early as August, 1989 when the Arts Association of Miyagi Prefecture requested the construction of a new museum in Sendai. Between 1989 and 1994 the site of an old bus depot was selected for the new project, and the program was expanded to include the replacement of the existing library. After a public consultation, an architectural competition was held for the design of the Mediatheque, and in March 1995 Toyo Ito and Associates Architects was named the winner out of 235 competing proposals.

Ito’s proposal was conceptually rooted in an idea of “fluid” space of technology discussed in his 1997 article Tarzan in the Media Jungle. Rather than viewing media as a foreign element to nature, Ito embraced new media/computing as forming an integral part of the contemporary urban environment. The building was conceived as a transparent cube through which thin floor plates float suspended on organic-looking seaweed-like “tubes.” The cube was meant to be read as a small representative element of an infinite, viscous information space, with the four edges sealed with glass facades which, through their reflections, would allow the building to alternately dematerialize or repeat itself creating a kind of ephemeral connection with infinite space. This concept of ephemerality of partitions was intimately linked with the Mediatheque’s mission to be barrier-free, in the sense of providing specialized services to those with visual, auditory or other physical impairments . Ito considered that the new library, as its role in the city shifts from a place of mere access to text-based information, requires a corresponding shift in the meaning of the term barrier-free to include a removal of architectural barriers which dictate how a space must be used.

"The government enjoined us to make Sendai Mediatheque "barrier free," meaning free of barriers obstructing access by the weak or the handicapped. I took "barrier free" to mean also freedom from administrative constraints. It is precisely because I wanted to restore vitality and joy to the spaces of public facilities that the tubes, which caused many people so much trouble to erect, came to exist."

Ito also refers to Mies' Barcelona Pavilion and Le Corbusier’s Dom-ino house as precedents for his work, and indeed, the Mediatheque appears to mix concepts from the two projects, combining le Corbusier’s play with slab and column structure, with Mies “fluid” spatial effects achieved through combined transparency and reflectivity of materials.

Location

The Sendai Mediatheque is located in the heart of the city of Sendai, only a few blocks away from the city hall. The building sits flush with Jozenji street, a six-lane divided boulevard, although there are entrances on all four sides of the building.[2] The diaphanous glass and metal façade of the institution, while differing from the mainly white, opaque volumes of the neighbouring buildings, blends harmoniously with the environment during the daytime due to its reflectivity, while at night the interior lighting scheme transforms the volume into a multi-hued lantern. The ground floor is conceived as an extension of the street, with a cafe, bookstore, and event plaza sitting freely (without partitions) within the ground floor space, with views to the sidewalk through the double-glazed facade facing Jozenji Street.

This extension of the city into the building continues throughout all seven floors above ground; a gesture which reinforces Ito’s resistance to the rigid limitation of activities in the building to within predetermined areas.

...this building has many free spaces, that is, spaces that are not intended, as rooms are, to serve specific functions. Such spaces exist, for example, between the tubes and the building perimeter. Visitors will be able to use such spaces as they use the city streets, for various activities. ...

I am hoping that, as such spaces are used, the Mediatheque will become a place for thinking about the city.

Toyo Ito (2001), [3]

The building

View of the interior

The Sendai Mediatheque is a mixed-program public facility which combines library and art gallery functions located in the city of Sendai, Japan. Toyo Ito's winning entry for an open competition commissioned by the city of Sendai in 1995, the innovative building opened to the public in January 2001.[4] The Mediatheque's seven levels of facilities offer a range of services including a conventional book-lending library, an extensive collection of film and audio recordings with stations for both viewing and editing, a theatre, to a cafe and bookstore, all housed in a nearly cubic glass enclosure.[4] The seven platforms are supported by what Ito calls "characterizing" architectural elements:[4] a forest of 13 non-uniform tubes which appear to rise fluidly through the building. Architecturally, the building is considered an important milestone in Ito's career.[5]

"In terms of architectural genre the Sendai Mediatheque was a pioneering example of attempts to use new notions of 'media' as an architectural concept."[6]

This project’s importance is derived from its poetic imagery, avant-garde program and technical innovation. In Ito’s own words:

Sendai Mediatheque embodies our proposal for a completely new concept of architecture. ...The complex includes a Mediatheque, an art gallery, a library, an information service center for people with visual and hearing impairments and a visual image media center. During the open competition and subsequent phase of basic designing, our primary effort was on demolishing the archetypal ideas of an art museum or library to reconstruct a new idea of architecture called "mediatheque" utilizing the state-of-the-art media.
Toyo Ito, [7]

Functions

Organization

Ito, in creating the Sendai Mediatheque, acknowledged that it would be an institution devoted to accommodating changing technologies. While the design of the Mediatheque is meant to encourage a flexibility of use through the blurring of boundaries found in traditional library and museum typologies, Ito resists the characterization of the space inside the center as the “homogenous” or "universal" space of modernism.

"The Sendai Mediatheque has been constantly changing from the beginning. However, it differs from universal space in that there is considerable variation depending on where you are in the building. for example, the spaces to the South and to the North are quite distinct because of the quality of light and wall surfaces, so their uses are determined by the given spatial conditions to some degree - although quite loosely, of course. Basically, universal space implies the possibility of doing anything anywhere in a homogeneous environment. Sendai is very different."

Indeed, reinforcing the subtle differences in spatial composition provided by the tubes, each level’s ceiling height and design, partition material and lighting colour reinforce the differentiation in uses to create space which could not fairly be described as homogeneous. Perhaps most striking, however, is the differentiation between levels is the furniture designed by several different designers which through colour, style, and layout becomes one of the most prominent identifying features of a particular floor.

Structure and materials

The structure of the Sendai Mediatheque is composed of three main elements: tubes, plates and skin.

The plates (floor slabs) are composed of a honeycomb- like network of steel sections infilled with lightweight concrete. The steel honeycomb structure allows the plate to span between irregularly spaced vertical supports without beams, and with minimal thickness of the slab itself. Each floor hosts a different set of the building’s many facilities which are more or less free to interact with each other over the surface of a given plate.

The skin, or facade treatment differs on all five exposed sides of the building, modulating light and views, creating a uniformity across each face of the cube during the day. The main (south-facing) facade is double-glazed and functions as part of the building’s climate control system. The materials which compose the skin range from glass, to steel panels, to aluminium mesh.

The most striking structural elements are the tubes, composed of thick-walled steel pipes; they range in size from 7 to 30 inches In diameter. Although they appear to be continuous, the tubes were actually manufactured in floor-height segments and were assembled sequentially, floor-by-floor. The tubes perform a number of functions. Firstly, they serve to structurally support the building. The four tubes closest to the outer corners of the plates were designed to resist a 400-year earthquake, while the others resist the vertical gravity loads. As a test to its integrity, the building survived the March 2011 earthquake with little to no damage.

The tubes also house vertical circulation of air, water, electricity, light and people within the building. The constant motion of people through the stairs and elevators, as well as the glow of light passing through these tubes creates a perceptual link between the floors, and the functions they house, which might otherwise have felt isolated from one another. Because the tubes create links throughout the full height of the building, they are often glazed to provide fire protection between floors.

In the plane of a specific floor, the non-standard layout loosely manipulates the layout of the floor plan. The size of each tube is determined by its internal function – stairs, elevator, light shaft. Moreover, since the exact dimensions of the tubes vary from floor to floor, this variation, along with differentiation in the lighting colours between floors, adds a distinctive character to each level. Structure becomes ornamentation.

References

  1. Sendai Mediatheque: About Sendai Mediatheque, accessed February 28, 2011
  2. N.R. Pollock; Toyo Ito & Associates. Mediatheque, Sendai, Japan. Architectural Record, 189, Part 5 (2001): 190.
  3. Toyo Ito. Hiroshi Wanatabi, Trans. Lessons of the Sendai Mediatheque. Japan Architect, 41 (2001): 7
  4. 1 2 3 Designboom: Toyo Ito, Interview. Vicennza, October 25, 2001, accessed February 28, 2011
  5. Toyo Ito: The New Real Architecture Exhibition, Tokyo. El Croquis. Sendai Mediatheque. El Croquis. No. 123, (2005): 14
  6. Akira Suzuki. Smt 2.0 – Upgrading the Sendai Mediatheque to Produce an Archive for the Folksonomy Era. VOLUME, 15, (2008): 66-69.
  7. Toyo Ito: Image of Architecture in Electronic Age. Interview Statement, Designboom, accessed February 28, 2011
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Coordinates: 38°15′56″N 140°51′56″E / 38.26556°N 140.86556°E / 38.26556; 140.86556

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