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Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates

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Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates

Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior Photography, Waterfront, Beam
© Katsumasa Tanaka

Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior PhotographyKusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior PhotographyKusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Interior PhotographyKusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior Photography+ 21

  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year :  2022
  • Photographs

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Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior Photography
© Katsumasa Tanaka

Text description provided by the architects. A bridge in Osogoe, Shuto Town, Iwakuni City destroyed by the Western Japan Flood in July 2018, was rebuilt as a wooden bridge that will become a new symbol for the community.

Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior Photography
© Katsumasa Tanaka
Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Image 17 of 21
Plan
Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior Photography, Garden
© Katsumasa Tanaka

On both sides of the bridge are the factory and store of “Dassai”, a Japanese sake produced by Asahi-Shuzo brewery known for its unique sake production, which covered the wooden part of the construction cost by donation.

Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Interior Photography
© Katsumasa Tanaka
Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Image 20 of 21
Elevations
Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Interior Photography
© Katsumasa Tanaka

Considering the risk of recurring disasters, an RC frame was combined with 105-square cypress balustrades. The arrangement of the cypresses created a gentle curve that echoed the surrounding mountain range, and the use of 105-square members, the most used member-size in Japanese wooden construction, created a bridge with a nostalgic human scale.

Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Image 16 of 21
© Katsumasa Tanaka
Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Image 19 of 21
Section

By combining Japan’s proud carpentry skills with the modern technology of computational design, a human and soft expression that has never been seen before in conventional civil engineering structures was created.

Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates - Exterior Photography, Waterfront
© Katsumasa Tanaka

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Project location

Address:Iwakuni, Yamaguchi, Japan

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.

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Cite: “Kusugibashi Bridge / Kengo Kuma & Associates” 21 Sep 2022. ArchDaily. Accessed .

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