Riken Yamamoto
Biographical notes
Riken Yamamoto, winner of the 2024 Pritzker Architecture Prize, Is born in China’s capital Beijing in 1945. Riken Yamamoto relocated to Yokohama, Japan after World War II. The son of an engineer and a pharmacist, Yamamoto gained his bachelor’s degree from Nihon University in 1968, then continued his studies at Tokyo University of the Arts, where he earned a Master of Arts in Architecture in 1971. Two years later, he founded his own firm, Riken Yamamoto & Field Shop, which he continues to direct. Unlike some of his compatriots who have also received the Pritzker Prize, Yamamoto’s five-decade architectural career has largely focused on Asia. His only major project outside the Asian continent is The Circle Convention Center in Zurich, a versatile convention, event and retail complex located close to the city’s airport. His other projects are predominantly located in Japan, China and the Republic of Korea, and include private residences, social housing complexes, educational facilities, university campuses, institutional headquarters, temporary housing in Heita disaster area and museums. Yamamoto’s architectural philosophy is closely intertwined with social issues. “Every house is an integral part of a city, and every family is a vital component of the community,” he says. “The relationship between community and family, like the transition space between the city and private residences, is fundamental to the existence of the community.”
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