japan: darko radovic

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Page 1: Japan: Darko Radovic

7pm Thursday 1st MayRMIT BUILDING 50 (Orr Street, off Victoria Street) Gold coin donation

architectsforpeace is a humanitarian, not for profit organization aiming to provide an alternative discussion forum on issues concerning the built environment. We depend on the time and effort of volunteers and keep overheads to a minimum. Your contribution keeps this work going and is much appreciated. www.architectsforpeace.org

Darko Radovic is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne. He received his doctorate in Architecture and Urbanism from the University of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and taught, researched and practised architecture and urbanism in Europe, Australia and Asia. Most recently (2006-2008), he was a Professor of Architec-ture and Urban Design for the Centre for Sustainable Urban Regeneration at the University of Tokyo,

Darko’s investigation of the concepts of urbanity and sustainable develop-ment focuses at culturally and environmentally diverse contexts, which exemplify and expose difference and offer encounter with the other. He is the co-author of Green City: Sustainable Homes, Sustainable Suburbs (UNSW Press/Routledge 2005), Cross-Cultural Urban Design: Global or Local Practice? (Routledge 2007), and the author of Urbophilia (the University of Belgrade, 2007) and Another Tokyo (University of Tokyo, 2008).

Urban Spaces and Cultures of TokyoDarko Radovic

This talk will give an visual overview of some of the well-known parts of Tokyo, and spaces and activities which make those precincts vibrant and distinctive. A particular focus will be at Nezu and Yanaka, two largely residential parts of the Japanese capital city which were lucky enough to survive both the catastrophic post-earthquake conflagration in 1923 and fires which followed American bombing in 1945. As such, Nezu and Yanaka - provide the most valuable ‘vertical’ connection with the past, places with patina which pre-dates the drama of the Japanese encounter with the West. In terms of urban design and architecture, they exemplify a number of spatial qualities which can be seen as peculiar, or even unique to the Japanese city.

The starting position of the research behind this talk (which was conducted at the University of Tokyo 2006-2008) is that environmental sustainability and cultural sustainability can never be separated, that built spaces which truly respond to the environmental condition always belong to culture of the place in and for which they were created. That position will frame the conclu-sion- that Nezu and Yanaka in Tokyo, and similar living historic environments worldwide, contain messages of critical importance for sustainable urban development.

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