Public Housing in Japan

von Marco Pompili

Tokio und Zürich

A book on the development of multi-unit housing in Japan and on the work of the Dōjunkai association, the first Japanese governmental housing authority.

EUR 20’755

103% von EUR 20’000

103 %
So funktioniert’s

Es gilt das «Alles oder Nichts»-Prinzip: Nur wenn das Finanzierungsziel erreicht oder übertroffen wird, werden dem Projekt die Gelder ausgezahlt.

42 Unterstützer*innen

Erfolgreich abgeschlossen am 6.1.2023

Dōjunkai Apartments: The birth of public housing in Japan

Why it is important:

The aim of the project is to make the topic of modern public housing in Japan accessible to a wider public. We want to do this by publishing the first book in English on this subject. The book is addressed to readers with an interest in housing and in Japan. In particular architects, scholars in the disciplines of the built environment and of Japanese Studies. Our account centres on the 1920s, when multi-unit housing were introduced to a larger scale by the Dōjunkai association (1924-1941). The association’s most groundbreaking work, the Dōjunkai Apartments (1924-1934), paved the way for the housing initiatives in the postwar period. The Dōjunkai Apartments crystallise the fervent social and political climate of late 1920s Japan, and, because of the crossing of western and local building culture that distinguish them, reveal a unique form of modernity.

Dōjunkai association snapshot:

The Japanese government established the Dōjunkai association in the aftermath of the Great Kantō Earthquake of 1923. The extent of the devastation and the urgency of reconstruction was cleverly turned by politicians and designers into an opportunity to experiment with new forms of collective living. Novel housing configurations and advanced building techniques were deployed alongside traditional construction. Fire- and earthquake proof reinforced concrete frames contained the lightweight wooden interiors of the dwelling units. The Dōjunkai Apartments featured courtyards, bath houses, theatres, and other communal amenities, which, during the period of recovery after the earthquake, became symbolic of community building.

Publisher:

The project has attracted the interest of several prestigious publishers in Europe and in the United States. We have been liaising with one of these publishing houses in particular, to whom the manuscript will be submitted in the first semester of 2023.

Completing the manuscript is the first goal and to reach it your help is needed.

  • Drawing of Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, 1924
    Drawing of Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, 1924
  • Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, ca.1925
    Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, ca.1925
  • Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, ca.1925
    Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, ca.1925
  • Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, 1999
    Dōjunkai Aoyama Apartments at Omotesandō, 1999
  • One building of Dōjunkai Apartments at Omotesandō repurposed as Dōjun-wing within Omotesandō Hills complex by Mori Corp. and Tadao Ando, Tokyo 2006
    One building of Dōjunkai Apartments at Omotesandō repurposed as Dōjun-wing within Omotesandō Hills complex by Mori Corp. and Tadao Ando, Tokyo 2006

An original contribution to existing literature

Book features:

  • First comprehensive work in English on public housing in Japan and on the Dōjunkai Apartments
  • Multidisciplinary character (architecture, japanology, history)
  • Authors from Europe, North America and Japan

Editor:

  • Dr Marco Pompili, architect and independent scholar, Zurich

Contributors:

  • Dr Ōtsuki Toshio, professor at The University of Tokyo, housing historian
  • Dr Carola Hein, professor and head at Delft University of Technology, urban planning specialist
  • Dr Silvana De Maio, professor at Università «L’Orientale» of Naples, japanologist
  • Nicholas Risteen, assistant teaching professor, Penn State College of Arts and Architecture
  • Dr. John Leisure, historian, Specially Appointed Researcher, University of Tokyo

Interviews with:

  • Professor Fujimori Terunobu, architect and professor emeritus of The University of Tokyo and director of the Edo-Tokyo Museum, Tokyo
  • Professor Satō Shigeru, professor emeritus of Waseda University, Tokyo
  • Professor Jinnai Hidenobu, Hosei University, Tokyo

Some facts:

  • ca. 87’000 words
  • ca. 300 pages
  • Three parts, seven chapters, and three sets of interviews
  • ca.120 illustrations (archives, other public and private collections, photographers)
  • Dr Marco Pompili
    Dr Marco Pompili
  • Dr Marco Pompili - Lecturer at University of New South Wales, Sydney
    Dr Marco Pompili - Lecturer at University of New South Wales, Sydney
  • Dr Marco Pompili - Conference at Chinese University, Hong Kong
    Dr Marco Pompili - Conference at Chinese University, Hong Kong
  • Dr Marco Pompili - Yes, I observe the world through architecture and through my camera
    Dr Marco Pompili - Yes, I observe the world through architecture and through my camera
  • Dr Marco Pompili - With students of University of New South Wales in Kyoto
    Dr Marco Pompili - With students of University of New South Wales in Kyoto

This is what the project needs backing for

This book-project is being carried out outside of the university world. It receives no support from any academic institution. All participants are working on a voluntary basis.

Funds are needed for the making of the manuscript. Your contribution helps pay fees for:

  • Professional translator from Japanese into English (for example interviews)
  • Professional copyeditor of all English texts

Further your contribution helps cover:

  • Printing cost of illustrations in excess of the maximum one set by the press (it’s a book about architecture, the visual aspect is important)
  • Fees for images with copyright
  • Wemakeit cut off of 10%

Other potential sponsors: Applications for a number of grant programs are going to be made. However, obtaining money might prove difficult. Even in case of success the awarded sum wouldn’t be sufficient to cover all of the costs that are on the initiator. Eventual funds in excess will be distributed across the contributors as a symbolic fee for the many months of work.

Your contribution is essential for the success of the project.

Please use links below to get to know more about authors.

  • Reward - 100, 200, 300
    Reward - 100, 200, 300
  • Reward - 700
    Reward - 700
  • Reward - 1'000 (set of 2)
    Reward - 1'000 (set of 2)
  • Dōjunkai Hiranuma-chō Apartments, Yokohama 1927
    Dōjunkai Hiranuma-chō Apartments, Yokohama 1927
  • Dōjunkai Kiyosuna Apartments, stair in the corner building (photo 1997)
    Dōjunkai Kiyosuna Apartments, stair in the corner building (photo 1997)
  • Dōjunkai Daikanyama Apartments, detail of stained glass door (photo 1995)
    Dōjunkai Daikanyama Apartments, detail of stained glass door (photo 1995)
  • Ozu Yasujirō, «Tokyo Monogatari» 1953. A scene filmed in the Dōjunkai Apartments
    Ozu Yasujirō, «Tokyo Monogatari» 1953. A scene filmed in the Dōjunkai Apartments
  • Reward - 500
    Reward - 500