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Spotlight: Kenzō Tange

As one of the eldest in a long line of architects that have made Japan one of the most revered countries in architecture, Pritzker-Prize winning architect Kenzō Tange (4 September 1913 – 22 March 2005) helped define Japan’s post-WWII emergence into Modernism. Though he was trained as an architect, Tange was equally as influential as an urban planner giving him significant influence in Japan and around the world at both large and small scales.

Spotlight: Kenzō Tange - Image 1 of 4Spotlight: Kenzō Tange - Image 2 of 4Spotlight: Kenzō Tange - Image 3 of 4Spotlight: Kenzō Tange - Image 4 of 4Spotlight: Kenzō Tange - More Images+ 8

AD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange

AD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange -         Memorial Center, Facade, Column, Cityscape

AD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange -         Memorial Center, FacadeAD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange -         Memorial Center, FacadeAD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange -         Memorial Center, Facade, ArchAD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange -         Memorial Center, FacadeAD Classics: Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park / Kenzo Tange - More Images+ 11

On August 6th, 1945, a B-29 bomber dropped the first atomic bomb in history over Hiroshima, Japan, targeting the intersection of bridges over the Honkawa and Motoyasu rivers. The bomb devastated Hiroshima within a radius of 5 km, resulting in 140,000-150,000 deaths by December of that year.