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  2. Yoshirō Taniguchi (谷口 吉郎, Taniguchi Yoshirō, 24 June 1904 – 2 February 1979) was a Japanese architect. He was born in the city of Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. He was a graduate of Tokyo University Department of Architecture and professor at Tokyo Institute of Technology from 1929–1965.

  3. architecture-history.org › architects › architectsYOSHIO TANIGUCHI

    Taniguchi’s maternal grandfather was one of Japan’s earliest architects and later became the head of the Tokyo branch of a major construction company. Taniguchi’s father, Yoshiro Taniguchi, was a contemporary of Kunio Maekawa and a respected architect in his own right.

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  4. Aug 21, 2018 · Yoshio Taniguchi is a Japanese architect who creates perfect buildings. But is perfection what we want?... In the 1951 film, The Man in the White Suit, chemist Sidney Stratton invents a fabric that will never crease or get dirty or wear out.

  5. Yoshio Taniguchi (born October 17, 1937, Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese architect best known as the designer of the early 21st-century expansion of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City.

  6. Quick Reference. (1904–79) Japanese architect and educator. Taniguchi established his reputation with the design of his functionalist Hydraulics Laboratory (1932) at the Tokyo Institute of Technology after having criticized Bunriha architects for ...

  7. Yoshio Taniguchi (谷口 吉生, Taniguchi Yoshio; born 1937) is a Japanese architect best known for his redesign of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, which was reopened November 20, 2004. Critics have emphasized Taniguchi's fusion of traditional Japanese and Modernist aesthetics.

  8. “The model for MoMA is Manhattan itself,” says its architect, Yoshio Taniguchi. “The Sculpture Garden is Central Park, and around it is a city with buildings of various functions and purpose.