Lamenting the Loss of Hotel Okura, One of Tokyo's Modernist Gems

The news last year that the Hotel Okura, often described as one of Tokyo´s "Modernist gems," was to be demolished was met with widespread disappointment across the board. Built in 1962 under the design direction of Yoshiro Taniguchi, Hideo Kosaka, Shiko Munakata, and Kenkichi Tomimoto, the hotel has long been considered a significant architectural landmark in the Japanese capital. With only a week to go until the hotel checks out its last guest, Monocle—having been granted exclusive access—have shared with us a film to capture "the gracious ways of this much-loved building."

Hotel Okura. Image © Monocle

Last year Monocle launched a Save the Okura campaign protesting it's demolition, garnering over 9000 signatures from around the globe. Monocle's Editor-in-Chief Tyler Brule printed and presented the petition to Hotel Okura's board last month, but sadly to no avail. He has commented that "given Japan spends so much time and money talking up 'coolness', it seems oddly ridiculous that there have been no moves made to preserve something that is the embodiment of '60s Japanese cool and has had so many close-ups in various pop-culture channels – fashion shoots, movies, architecture journals, and more."

Hotel Okura. Image © Monocle

Find out more about Hotel Okura on Monocle.

About this author
Cite: James Taylor-Foster. "Lamenting the Loss of Hotel Okura, One of Tokyo's Modernist Gems" 27 Aug 2015. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/772595/lamenting-the-loss-of-hotel-okura-one-of-tokyos-modernist-gems> ISSN 0719-8884

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