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Don
M. Hisaka
Architect
At
the end of the 1980s, the developer of a new golf course outside
Tokyo commissioned architect Don Hisaka to design a clubhouse that
would reflect the look and feel of rural New England. Hisaka felt
that plopping a clapboard-sided structure down amidst the rice paddies
and cypress groves of Japan's Ibaraki Prefecture might seem more
than a bit incongruous. Consequently, he refined the developer's
vision by looking to the basic concepts that informed both classic
New England and traditional Japanese architecture: simplicity of
design and materials, precision, intimacy of scale, and a harmonious
relationship with landscape and surroundings.
The
result: a 60,000-square-foot complex of concrete, courtyards, glass,
and gardens that was resonant of both colonial America and feudal
Japan, and which earned Hisaka the accolades of a number of architectural
publications as one of his typically ingenious blends of seemingly
irreconcilable cultures. The Ibaraki project was also recognized
by Hisaka's peers as yet another example of his unique ability to
synthesize the best of disparate influences and deliver tasteful
and charming buildings that complement rather than overwhelm their
surroundings.
| Beginning
in 1960, when he opened his practice in Cleveland, and continuing
over the years through moves to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and
eventually to Berkeley, California, Hisaka has brought his singular
vision to a wide range of commissions. In the Cleveland
area, for example, he designed Beachwood's Signature Square
office complex (198689), the glass atrium that connects
Thwing and Hitchcock Halls on the campus of Case Western Reserve
University (1980), and the Saalfield vacation house in suburban
Peninsula (1975). He also created a number of academic structures
and libraries at Harvard University (in whose Graduate School
of Design he taught for many years) and at colleges in New York
and Kentucky, as well as the Mansfield (Ohio) Art Center, which
won a Progressive Architecture National Citation Award
in 1971. |
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1150
18th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. |
Another
fine example of his approach is the office building at 1150 18th
Street, N.W., in Washington, D.C. Hailed by Washington Post
architecture critic Benjamin Forgey as an exclamation point
that fits somehow into the middle of a ponderous sentence,
the building defies the leaden indifference of most modern commercial
structures by incorporating an airy, lattice-like grid facade and
playful turrets at its crown. At the same time, it manages to enliven
its neighbors on the block rather than overpower them. Hisaka's
design earned him the Cornerstone Award for the best urban office
building of 1991-just one of the nearly 50 citations for merit with
which Hisaka's work has been honored over the years, including the
1970 Cleveland Arts Prize for Architecture.
Perhaps
Hisaka's best-known composition is the Bartholomew County Jail in
Columbus, Indiana (1990), a community with an eclectic collection
of innovative modern structures designed by some of the world's
finest architects, including Eero Saarinen, I. M. Pei, and Cesar
Pelli. Characteristically, Hisaka chose to combine a host of design
elements from the past and the present to create an edifice that
paid homage to Columbus's stock of existing 19th-century buildings
while embracing many of the forms and effects of modernism. Also
characteristically, the resulting building-which could have been
a utilitarian structure with unappealing associations-is instead
a graceful and attractive addition to the Columbus cityscape and
a genuine civic emblem.
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text
by
Mark
Gottlieb
Fall 2002
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Cleveland
State University Center, Cleveland, Ohio
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