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...Architect Kenzo Tange violated the native tenets of compactness with his grandiose plan for an improved metropolis that would extend out over Tokyo Bay. Today, at 74, he is still pushing it. But now Tange, the winner of this year's Pritzker Architecture Prize, is at the center of another bitter controversy, over his design for new Tokyo metropolitan government offices. With a main section 797 ft. tall and an estimated construction cost of $780 million, this project would be the biggest, most expensive Japanese building ever -- too big and too expensive, his critics say. Even more disconcerting to many...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Japan Is On The Go | 9/21/1987 | See Source »

...which is expected to cost UAL about $7.3 million. Allegis, Trump said, was "better suited to the next world-class disease." Along with the boyish billionaire, the Wall Street rumor mill named as possible UAL takeover partners the New York investment firm of Coniston Partners and the Chicago-based Pritzker family, which controls Braniff and owns 1% of UAL's shares...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Air Pockets Around United | 4/20/1987 | See Source »

...work of young Japanese architects acquires cachet and stirs interest around the world, it is fitting that the elder statesman of Japanese design, Kenzo Tange, 73, should become the first of his countrymen to receive the Pritzker Architecture Prize. The $100,000 award, announced last week, went to one of the most important modernists of his generation, a master builder who can point to a body of work that is large, far-flung and confident. Tange was a committed and conscientious designer in the International Style during its heyday, a modernist who resisted the easiest answers of modernism during...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: An Elegant Sweep Toward Heaven | 3/30/1987 | See Source »

Stirling has won several distinguished architectural awards, including the British Royal Gold Medal for Architecture in 1980 and the $100,000 Pritzker award...

Author: By Matthew Snyder, | Title: Glittering Past Leads to Harvard Present | 10/17/1985 | See Source »

...Scotch architect of imposing girth but unpretentious manner, he was little known in the U.S. when Harvard selected him in 1979 from among some 70 competitors for the Sackler job. Since then, he has won the gold medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, the international $100,000 Pritzker Prize and some of England's and West Germany's choicest commissions, including an addition to the Tate Gallery in London and a science center in the monumental heart of West Berlin. He is the subject of a lavish catalog with commentary, to be published next month, titled James Stirling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Brilliant Or Cursed By Apollo? | 6/17/1985 | See Source »

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