JUNZO SAKAKURA AND TAKASHIMAYA: POSTWAR RECONSTRUCTION | Side Gallery

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JUNZO SAKAKURA AND TAKASHIMAYA: POSTWAR RECONSTRUCTION

JUNZO SAKAKURA AND TAKASHIMAYA: POSTWAR RECONSTRUCTION

CASA BRUTUS - TOKYO

17 December 2021 – 31 December 2021

The exhibition Junzo Sakakura and Takashimaya: Postwar Reconstruction explored the pivotal role of the architect Junzo Sakakura in Japan’s postwar urban and commercial recovery. Held in 2021, the show highlighted Sakakura’s design of the now-historic Takashimaya Wakayama Branch (1948), a modest two-story wooden building featuring a butterfly-shaped roof, open interiors, and a series of skip floors connected by ramps, creating a fluid and playful spatial promenade. The exhibition also examined his subsequent projects, including the Takashimaya Osaka Namba new annex (1950) and the large-scale redevelopment of Shinjuku Station West Exit (1966), emphasizing Sakakura’s innovative approach to circulation, light, and human experience in public and commercial architecture.

Visitors could engage with meticulous models and computer-generated reconstructions of buildings no longer standing, including the Wakayama Branch, giving the sense of traversing the original architecture. The exhibition also traced Sakakura’s formative years in Le Corbusier’s atelier and his contribution to the 1937 Paris Expo Japanese Pavilion, demonstrating how his early modernist training informed his postwar vision. Through archival drawings, photographs, and architectural models, the exhibition revealed Sakakura’s attention to human-centered design, his inventive handling of ramps and split-levels, and his ability to integrate urban planning with dynamic spatial experiences.


A standout feature of the exhibition was the presentation of models and detailed reconstructions of Sakakura’s Takashimaya Wakayama Branch, allowing visitors to experience its innovative ramps, butterfly roof, and interconnected skip floors. Complementary displays included archival drawings, photographs, and recreations of the Osaka Namba annex and the Shinjuku Station West Exit redevelopment, revealing Sakakura’s pioneering integration of architectural form, human circulation, and urban context.

The exhibition also offered insights into Sakakura’s formative years under Le Corbusier, including his work on the 1937 Paris Expo Japanese Pavilion, showing how international modernist principles were adapted to Japan’s postwar reconstruction. Together, these displays underscored Sakakura’s enduring impact on Japanese architecture: a blend of technical ingenuity, sensitivity to human experience, and a nuanced understanding of space that continues to inform contemporary design practice.