Concepts
Civilizations/Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes
Governors
Historic Moments

Introduction

Comandante General

Great Admiral

Great Artist

Great Engineer

Ada Lovelace

Alvar Aalto

Bi Sheng

Charles Correa

Filippo Brunelleschi

Gustave Eiffel

Imhotep

Isidore of Miletus

James of St. George

James Watt

Jane Drew

John Roebling

Joseph Paxton

Kenzo Tange

Leonardo da Vinci

Mimar Sinan

Nikola Tesla

Robert Goddard

Sergei Korolev

Shah Jahān

Wernher von Braun

Great General

Great Merchant

Great Musician

Great Prophet

Great Scientist

Great Writer

Kenzo Tange
Historical Context
In the early 20th century, the architectural style known as high modernism appealed to all powers – democratic, fascist, and Communist. Modernism, especially in the imagination of architects like the Swiss Le Corbusier, promised to re-focus buildings away from tradition and towards a functionality that would also, owing to its very aesthetic and form, create new kinds of citizens. Le Corbusier’s buildings were often criticized, though, for their numbing quality and inorganic lines. Kenzo Tange, a student of Le Corbusier, sought to change this. Combining Le Corbusier’s sweeping concrete vision, Tange’s “metabolism” combined modern forms with organic ones and became influential in 1960s-era Japan and beyond. Rather than the modernist notion that modern architecture would make modern subjects, Tange envisioned a mutual becoming, one that also fused elements from Japanese traditional architecture, the natural world, and the imaginary of modernism.

Before his death in 2005, Tange was responsible for building the Peace Center in Hiroshima, the Tokyo Olympic arenas, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, and others. He won the prestigious Pritzker Prize in architecture in 1987.
Unique Ability

Activated Effect (1 charge)

Grants Tourism in each of this city's Districts equal to its adjacency bonus (halved for Gold).

PortraitSquare
icon_unit_great_engineer

Traits

Information Era
Great Engineer
PortraitSquare
icon_unit_great_engineer
Historical Context
In the early 20th century, the architectural style known as high modernism appealed to all powers – democratic, fascist, and Communist. Modernism, especially in the imagination of architects like the Swiss Le Corbusier, promised to re-focus buildings away from tradition and towards a functionality that would also, owing to its very aesthetic and form, create new kinds of citizens. Le Corbusier’s buildings were often criticized, though, for their numbing quality and inorganic lines. Kenzo Tange, a student of Le Corbusier, sought to change this. Combining Le Corbusier’s sweeping concrete vision, Tange’s “metabolism” combined modern forms with organic ones and became influential in 1960s-era Japan and beyond. Rather than the modernist notion that modern architecture would make modern subjects, Tange envisioned a mutual becoming, one that also fused elements from Japanese traditional architecture, the natural world, and the imaginary of modernism.

Before his death in 2005, Tange was responsible for building the Peace Center in Hiroshima, the Tokyo Olympic arenas, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, and others. He won the prestigious Pritzker Prize in architecture in 1987.

Traits

Information Era
Great Engineer
Unique Ability

Activated Effect (1 charge)

Grants Tourism in each of this city's Districts equal to its adjacency bonus (halved for Gold).

Language
Choose Ruleset
Get it on App StoreGet it on Google Play
CopyrightPrivacy Policy