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JAPAN, THE EISHIN CAMPUSThis page is dedicated to Hisae Hosoi, Mr. Sakaida, Murakoshi-san, Mr. Kodera, Sumiyoshi-san, Hiro Nakano, Miyoko Tsutsui,and all the other teachers, staff, and students who gave their work and support to the creation of this campus | |
PROJECT HISTORY
Eishin Gakuen, an innovative private high school, was originally located in Musashino-shi, outside Tokyo. They decided to build a new school which was to become a combination high-school and college, on a new site of 9 hectares, once tea bush land, outside Tokyo, in Iruma-shi, Saitama Prefecture. The architectural commission to build this community, came with the explicit insistence, by the managing director of the school, Hisae Hosoi, that he wanted the project to be done under conditions where faculty, staff, and students, were all taking part in the design process. And by this he meant, not the pablum of token "participation" and "charettes" that has become common in the last twenty years, but honest-to-goodness decision making by the people in the school, based on individual and group understanding. Mr. Murakoshi, the school's vice-principal, went further. He told me that the school, as a whole, wanted to rebuild their own culture, in such a way as to build deeper allegience and practice to humane principles -- and he want me to take care, as far as it was possible, that the physical layout and spiritual cooperation of the members of the school, would have this effect: the creation of a new culture.
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Views of streets and public places on the campus |
POINTS OF SPECIAL INTEREST IN THIS PROJECT
Of all the projects we have done, this is one where the development of the pattern language and generative process received the most complete, and formal process of discovery of patterns, experiments, modification and formulation of patterns, hammering out a final version in committee, and then formal ratification of our final draft by the body of the whole school: directors, teachers, staff and students.
The campus in winter. Gymnasium, classrooms, and the lake. Tea bushes left in place to form gardens on the campus | |
FURTHER DISCUSSION OF THE GENERATIVE CODE FOR THE EISHIN CAMPUS | Final version of the pattern language for the stepwise conception and layout of the Eishin campus 14 pages | |
Below, the Eishin Campus from the distance, at sunset.
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