|
|
Tokyo
hotels at lowest rates.
Exclusive discounts upto 70% on resorts & hotels in Tokyo
that you won't find anywhere
!
Book Now- Save Money !
|
|
|
|
|
Our
special hotel deals and great discount for business and leisure
traveller's at hotels in Tokyo will suit every one's budget.
Lowest Hotel Rates!
|
|
|
|
Book
your Tokyo hotel online to be eligible for our Special Offers
which are valid for reservations on Special Internet Rates. Up to $100 Cash Back
|
|
|

|
|
Discount
accommodation in Tokyo and also with self-catering facilities at a very special value. These great prices don't last long!
Book today
!!
Search
Vacation Rentals |
|
|
|
Tokyo Modern Architecture
The most enduring legacy of the bubble years of the late 1980s is Tokyo's
astonishing array of modern architecture . Japan's top postwar architect
Tange Kenzo has done more than most to define Tokyo's eclectic style -
his monumental Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building in
Shinjuku has been described as the last great edifice of postmodernism, though
some would argue that he has gone one step further with the other-worldly Fuji
TV building in Odaiba . The 1964 Olympic's National
Yoyogi Stadium and United Nations University also form part of Tange's Tokyo
work.
Ando Tadao , former boxer, self-taught architect and recipient of the
UK Royal Gold Medal for architecture in 1997, also has buildings in Tokyo; the
Collezione building, close to Omotesando in Harajuku ,
is a good example of his liking for rough concrete and bold structural forms.
Ando's best work, however, such as Osaka's Church of Light, the Literature
Museum in Himeji , and the contemporary art museum,
Benesse House, on Nao-shima , can be seen around his
hometown of Osaka.
Other notable Japanese architects who made their mark in the 1980s are
Maki Fumihiko , whose work includes the futuristic Tokyo Metropolitan
Gymnasium in Sendagaya, the Spiral Building near Omotesando, with its
deliberately fragmented facade, and the ambitious Hillside Terrace in ritzy
Daikanyama, a complex of homes, offices and shops developed over a 23-year
period; Arata Isozaki 's Ochanomizu Square Building, just north of the
Imperial Palace, is a good example of how old and new architecture can be
successfully combined, and visibly taking its inspiration from traditional
Japanese art - in this case, paintings of overlapping mountains fading into the
mists - is Rokkaku Kijo 's Tokyo Budokan, the martial arts mecca.
Many top foreign architects have used Tokyo as a canvas on which to work out
their most extravagant designs: in Asakusa, look for Philippe Starck 's
Super Dry Hall, with its enigmatic "golden turd" on the roof; and Sir Norman
Foster 's Century Tower at Ochanomizu, which incorporates the vernacular
design of the torii , ten of which appear to be piled on top of each
other on the building's facade. Light floods into the soaring glass hall of
Rafael Vinőly 's Tokyo International Forum in Yurakucho, while Sir
Richard Rogers' Kabukicho Building, swathed in a framework of
stainless-steel rods, is hidden on a Shinjuku side street.
If you want to spend a day checking out some of these buildings, apart from
Shinjuku, go out to Odaiba or walk from Sendagaya Station
along Gaien-nishi-dori to Aoyama-dori, turn right and continue to the crossing
with Omotesando, where you can either continue down to Shibuya or turn right and
walk towards Harajuku. Either way, you'll have passed by many of the best
examples of modern Tokyo architecture. Also take with you Noriyuki Tajima's fine
Tokyo: A Guide to Recent Architecture , an illustrated pocket-sized
guidebook.
|
|
|