Urban Monuments by Japan’s Gaudí: The Works of Japanese Architect Von Jour Caux

Culture

Collaboration and Improvisation

La Porta Izumi (1990) and Mind Waa (1992): Suginami, Tokyo

Two other apartment buildings Von designed are near Daitabashi Station in Suginami, Tokyo. The first, La Porta Izumi, is named for its symbolic status as a gateway from the busy traffic of the Kōshū Kaidō to the quiet residential streets beyond the bustling highway. The structure’s façade features a huge sculpture of a woman, her body bent and her hair falling in golden cascades. Together with a leaping Pegasus ready to take flight, the statue of the goddess brings new life to the Izumi residential district through what Von describes as “the power of legend to reach deep into the well of memory.”

Inside the entrance hall visitors are greeted by the contrasting images of a vaulted, church-like space with a sunlit stained glass and the alluring, sinuous form of a woman’s body. Further inside the building are soaring phallic pillars and a staircase decorated with mosaic motifs of octopus tentacles that create an erotic atmosphere.

Although easily mistaken for a love hotel, the structure is actually an apartment building. On the other side of an iron door is a private space for residents, the portal creating a clear borderline between the lascivious dramatics of the public spaces and the quiet privacy of the areas beyond. The apartment spaces themselves are a simple, conventional design without any excess decoration or adornment.

Phallic pillars stand guard over the art nouveau entrance hall of La Porta Izumi.
Phallic pillars stand guard over the art nouveau entrance hall of La Porta Izumi.

The Mind Waa building is another cooperative effort bringing together the talents and visions of Von and his collaborators. It is easily recognizable by eye-catching orange semi-spheres embedded at regular intervals in the outer fabric of the building, features inspired by the convenience store on the ground floor.

To the right off the entrance hall is a garden patio exclusively for residents. This decision to organize a communal housing project around an inner shared space is reminiscent of Gaudí’s famous Casa Batlló in Barcelona. The owner, an admirer of Gaudí, apparently asked specifically for a space designed around the idea of the sea when he commissioned the building. Von recalls how when working on Mind Waa he would come to work in the morning and find things starting to appear that he could never have imagined. Through their repeated collaborations, the artists deepened their mutual understanding, pushing and inspiring each other to create a space that Von himself knew little about until it became a reality. Their creative approach could be compared to a jazz session where musicians drive one another on to ever greater flights of inspiration and improvisation.

Visitor photograph Mind Waa’s unique exterior 
Visitor photograph Mind Waa’s unique exterior

The patio garden inside Mind Waa is designed around motifs of the sea.
The patio garden inside Mind Waa is designed around motifs of the sea.

next: A Never-Ending Hymn to Life

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