"Scenic Spots in Toyama, Japan" Toyama Glass Art Museum: the latest masterpiece by architect Kengo Kuma

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Toyama City Glass Art Museum (TOYAMA キラリ) officially opened in August this year. Through Kengo Kuma’s meticulous design and official planning, it combines the needs of the citizens’ library, life and leisure, lectures, and viewing glass art. The building has become a diversified and tourist-use site, where you can thoroughly feel the essence, beauty, reality, and gathering of the Toyama City Glass Art Museum.

◎ How do I get to the Toyama Glass Art Museum (TOYAMA キラリ)?

When I came to Toyama for the first time, I first saw the cityscape and streetscape of Hakodate I visited. The same street is wide and there are trams running around it. Therefore, I asked the reception staff to learn about the main traffic in Toyama. One of the tools is the streetcar.If you want to go to the Glass Art Museum, you can take the city tram loop line and get off at the "Sarrando Plasmae" stop and walk for two minutes to arrive.

Toyama City Glass Museum (Toyama Kirari, Japan) - Attractions in Toyama, Japan

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 3, Japan (Tomb-36)

◎ History Classroom-About the architect Kengo Kuma.

Kengo Kuma was born in Kanagawa Prefecture in 1954. He graduated from the Institute of Architecture at the University of Tokyo in 1979 with a master's degree in architecture. In 1990, Kengo Kuma founded Kengo Kuma Architects in Aoyama, Tokyo.But he also faced the 10 years of Japan’s economic bubble. He said: "The bubble economy collapsed in the XNUMXs. We call it the decade of Japan’s disappearance. There is almost no case to do. I can only accept invitations from friends and go to remote areas. If you go to the countryside, you can do even the smallest case. Ha, on the contrary, you can travel to many places and be happy!". [Text quoted from Common Wealth Magazine"Kengo Kuma: Architectural concessions show the beauty of heaven and earth"One Article]

When I saw this paragraph, I only had one feeling...very powerful!Can establish an office within 11 years!However, such a powerful architect submerged into the countryside with a soft body under the decline of the general environment. Perhaps this experience and experience. He not only used a lot of natural building materials such as bamboo, wood, mud brick, slate, and paper, but also persisted. The concept based on local materials advocates the integration of the building into the environment and the improvement of the accessibility of the building. It is called "weak building" or "Kuma Kumaru" by the outside world.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 2, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ List of fares.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 4, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ The profile I love very much, and the design of the official website is very beautiful!

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 5, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 6, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 7, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ This art gallery has meticulously designed various fonts, such as the toilet sign in the photo.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 9, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 8, Japan (Tomb-36)

◎ Toyama City Glass Art Museum (TOYAMA キラリ) uses ground materials to create a space environment that gathers citizens' needs.

 This was originally the site of a department store in Toyama City. The team wanted to create a good place for citizens to relax and give this space functional elements and commercial value. Therefore, libraries, reading rooms, exhibition rooms, lecture halls, and banks gathered together to bring citizens together. The planning of static activities needs to be in place once, and the team of architect Kengo Kuma is invited to carry out the work, and the fortifications are introduced into this architectural space.

Toyama City itself is a city with related technologies of glass art and manufacturing process. If you want to analogize with some concepts similar to Taiwan’s Yingge Ceramic Town, we can extend Kengo Kuma’s architectural focus on using local materials. Incorporating into the environment, it is constructed using glass and wood from Toyama City. It also takes Tateyama as the design inspiration, and uses the spiral avenue as the internal main body. It is intended to invite people from outside to walk in and eventually reach the top. [Released on Kengo Kuma's official websiteconcept of design]

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 11, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 10, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ This restaurant is a cafe brand of "No Muroya" in Kanazawa and is worth visiting.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 12, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 13, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 14, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 15, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ Accompanied by the staff in the museum, I was able to take such a wealth of photos to share with everyone.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 17, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ There are also many children's books in the museum.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 16, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 18, Japan (Tomb-36)

◎ Toyama City Glass Art Museum (TOYAMA キラリ) is not only an exhibition venue, but also promotes the art of glass.

This museum makes me very shocked when I shuttle in the moment. A public environment created by the government can be so comfortable and pleasant, and the static activities of the city can satisfy the enjoyment. I really envy the citizens of Toyama to have such a venue, and I hope that Taiwan can have the same level. Space appears.Turning to check the official website, but also unexpectedly found that one of the words of the museum curator is also worthy of our deep consideration (excerpts of the textual meaning).

"The cultivation of glass art talents and the industrialization of glass are one of the driving directions of the museum for the development of the community. I hope to help guide students to make them aspiring to become glass artists, and I want to convey that glass art is the biggest attraction for tourists when visiting Toyama. Power. If the museum is viewed from the location, the museum has already collected many potential glamorous works, as well as foreign contemporary glass art works, to go to the world with the audience."

Therefore, when you come to the art gallery, I would suggest to keep a little more time to watch the collections here slowly, which is absolutely beyond your imagination.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 19, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 20, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ After getting the shot, take a picture for everyone to look at the glass art work.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 21, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 22, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 23, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 25, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 24, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 26, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ The space planning is very diverse, which really meets everyone's needs for use.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 27, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 28, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 29, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 30, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 31, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 33, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ The glass exhibition on the 6th floor requires an additional fee for admission.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 32, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 34, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 35, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲▼ The works currently on display are the works of modern glass master Dale Chihuly.

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 37, Japan (Tomb-36)

Toyama City Glass Museum, Toyama Kirari, Building 36, Japan (Tomb-36)

▲ Little ingenuity at the door.


◎ Toyama City Glass Art Museum (TOYAMA キラリ)
– Address: 〒930−0062 5, 1 Nishimachi, Toyama City
– Tel: 076-461-3100
– Fax: 076-461-3310
– Opening hours:http://toyama-glass-art-museum.jp/visitor/
-Official website:http://toyama-glass-art-museum.jp/

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