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Japanese building practice : from ancient times to the Meiji period / Kenneth Frampton, Kunio Kudo and Keith Vincent

By: Frampton, Kenneth.
Contributor(s): Kudo, Kunio [(j.a.)] | Vincent, Keith [(j.a.)].
Publisher: N.Y. : Van Nostrand Reinhold, c1997Description: vii, 167 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.ISBN: 0442020317; 0471286966.Subject(s): Building -- Japan -- HistoryDDC classification: 690.0952
Contents:
Foreword. - Acknowledgments. - I. Typology, Cosmology, and Construction Methods / Kenneth. Frampton. 1. Woven Form and Japanese Cosmology. 2. The Evolution of Japanese Built Form. 3. The Evolution Of Shinto Architecture. 4. The Spiritual Ethos in Japanese Carpentry. 5. The Evolution of Guild Gulture. 6. The Development of the Apprenticeship System. 7. The Evolution of Tools and Methods. 8. The Tectonic Lexicon. - II. Construction Administration and Management from the Third Century to the Edo Period / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 9. Architecture of the Yamato State (A.D. 350-645). 10. Japan's First Bureaucracy (A.D. 645-950). 11. Architecture Under the Shoen System (A.D. 950-1467). 12. Building for War: The Rise of the Toryo (a.D. 1467-1603). 13. The Business of Building: Capitalism and Construction. 14. Architecture Under the Tokugawa Shogunate. 15. The Demise of Craftsmen: The Meiji Abolition of the Kumi. - III. Adoption of Western Building Technology: The Government Role / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 16. The Flow of Prohibited Knowledge. 17. Architecture for the Military and Industry. 18. The Age of Thomas Waters. 19. Josiah Conder and Tokyo University. 20. Hermann Ende and the German Connection. - IV. Vernacular Western Style as Constructed by the Meiji Toryo / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 21. Nagasaki. 22. Yokohama. 23. Tokyo. 24. Local Provinces. - V. The Rise of the Modern Japanese Contractor / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 25. Shimizugumi. 26. Nihon Doboku Kaisha. 27. Takenakakomuten. 28. Kajimagumi. - Bibliography. - List of Sources for Illustrations. - Endnotes.
Item type Current location Shelf location Call number Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Main Collection Taylor's Library-TU

Floor 4, Shelf 29 , Side 1, TierNo 2, BayNo 3

690.0952 FRA (Browse shelf) 1 Available SABDx,23003,02,CL 5000037342

Foreword. - Acknowledgments. - I. Typology, Cosmology, and Construction Methods / Kenneth. Frampton. 1. Woven Form and Japanese Cosmology. 2. The Evolution of Japanese Built Form. 3. The Evolution Of Shinto Architecture. 4. The Spiritual Ethos in Japanese Carpentry. 5. The Evolution of Guild Gulture. 6. The Development of the Apprenticeship System. 7. The Evolution of Tools and Methods. 8. The Tectonic Lexicon. - II. Construction Administration and Management from the Third Century to the Edo Period / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 9. Architecture of the Yamato State (A.D. 350-645). 10. Japan's First Bureaucracy (A.D. 645-950). 11. Architecture Under the Shoen System (A.D. 950-1467). 12. Building for War: The Rise of the Toryo (a.D. 1467-1603). 13. The Business of Building: Capitalism and Construction. 14. Architecture Under the Tokugawa Shogunate. 15. The Demise of Craftsmen: The Meiji Abolition of the Kumi. - III. Adoption of Western Building Technology: The Government Role / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 16. The Flow of Prohibited Knowledge. 17. Architecture for the Military and Industry. 18. The Age of Thomas Waters. 19. Josiah Conder and Tokyo University. 20. Hermann Ende and the German Connection. - IV. Vernacular Western Style as Constructed by the Meiji Toryo / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 21. Nagasaki. 22. Yokohama. 23. Tokyo. 24. Local Provinces. - V. The Rise of the Modern Japanese Contractor / Kunio Kudo, Keith Vincent. 25. Shimizugumi. 26. Nihon Doboku Kaisha. 27. Takenakakomuten. 28. Kajimagumi. - Bibliography. - List of Sources for Illustrations. - Endnotes.