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According to the Japanese-born, New York–based architect Shohei Shigematsu, there’s such a thing as a building being too refined. What matters most, in his view, is creating what he calls “memorable space”: the antithesis of anything lifeless or lacking a symbiotic relationship to the city or its surroundings. As a long-time partner at the firm OMA, Shigematsu leads its New York studio with a sense of openness, radicality, and unexpectedness. This philosophy connects the dots between his multifarious projects, whether they take the form of the new diamond-like extension to the New Museum in New York; the torquing Faena Forum in Miami; or the Casa Wabi Mushroom Pavilion in Puerto Escondido, Mexico.
For this (serendipitously “site-specific”) episode of Time Sensitive, Spencer met with Shigematsu inside a Hotel Chelsea suite, a fitting location for their long-view conversation on cities, urbanism, mixed-use design, and spaces for art and community-building—with a particular focus on the New Museum. They also discuss Shigematsu’s nearly three-decade evolution at OMA, how he has carved his own distinctive path at the firm, and the ways in which his Japaneseness has come alive through several of his recent building designs.
Special thanks to our Season 13 presenting partner, Van Cleef & Arpels.
Show Notes:
Shohei Shigematsu
[4:33] Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA)
[5:10] Rem Koolhaas
[5:47] S,M,L,XL (1995)
[6:59] Delirious New York (1978)
[7:43] Learning From Las Vegas (1972)
[10:57] OMA New York
[21:33] Toyo Ito
[23:20] Universal Headquarters
[26:42] New Museum
[31:55] SANAA New Museum Building
[48:16] Cai Guo-Quiang
[48:16] Taryn Simon
[48:16] “An Occupation of Loss” (2016)
[50:38] Kengo Kuma
[50:38] Alberto Kalach
[50:49] Bosco Sodi
[50:49] Casa Wabi Mushroom Pavilion
[54:22] Wilshire [Boulevard] Temple
[59:58] Tenjin Business Center
[59:58] Toranomon Hills Station Tower
[1:07:14] Olafur Eliasson
By The Slowdown4.9
153153 ratings
According to the Japanese-born, New York–based architect Shohei Shigematsu, there’s such a thing as a building being too refined. What matters most, in his view, is creating what he calls “memorable space”: the antithesis of anything lifeless or lacking a symbiotic relationship to the city or its surroundings. As a long-time partner at the firm OMA, Shigematsu leads its New York studio with a sense of openness, radicality, and unexpectedness. This philosophy connects the dots between his multifarious projects, whether they take the form of the new diamond-like extension to the New Museum in New York; the torquing Faena Forum in Miami; or the Casa Wabi Mushroom Pavilion in Puerto Escondido, Mexico.
For this (serendipitously “site-specific”) episode of Time Sensitive, Spencer met with Shigematsu inside a Hotel Chelsea suite, a fitting location for their long-view conversation on cities, urbanism, mixed-use design, and spaces for art and community-building—with a particular focus on the New Museum. They also discuss Shigematsu’s nearly three-decade evolution at OMA, how he has carved his own distinctive path at the firm, and the ways in which his Japaneseness has come alive through several of his recent building designs.
Special thanks to our Season 13 presenting partner, Van Cleef & Arpels.
Show Notes:
Shohei Shigematsu
[4:33] Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA)
[5:10] Rem Koolhaas
[5:47] S,M,L,XL (1995)
[6:59] Delirious New York (1978)
[7:43] Learning From Las Vegas (1972)
[10:57] OMA New York
[21:33] Toyo Ito
[23:20] Universal Headquarters
[26:42] New Museum
[31:55] SANAA New Museum Building
[48:16] Cai Guo-Quiang
[48:16] Taryn Simon
[48:16] “An Occupation of Loss” (2016)
[50:38] Kengo Kuma
[50:38] Alberto Kalach
[50:49] Bosco Sodi
[50:49] Casa Wabi Mushroom Pavilion
[54:22] Wilshire [Boulevard] Temple
[59:58] Tenjin Business Center
[59:58] Toranomon Hills Station Tower
[1:07:14] Olafur Eliasson

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