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Kisho Kurokawa, Oita Stadium, Oita, Japan - Opus 46 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R567
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Kisho Kurokawa, Oita Stadium, Oita, Japan - Opus 46 (Hardcover)
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List price R672
Loot Price R567
Discovery Miles 5 670
You Save R105 (16%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Known as the 'Big Eye' the Oita Stadium is one of the chosen venues
for the next World Cup in 2002. It will be reused for the second
stage of the Japan Inter-Prefectural Athletic Competition in 2008
after the World Cup, continuing to grow in the future to become a
large-scale all-purpose sports park for Oita. The whole site covers
an area of 225 ha and has several facilities outside the main
football stadium. These include general fitness, training and
lodging centres, a botanical pool, two multipurpose athletic
fields, two rugby and soccer practise pitches, a softball field,
tennis courts and other game areas. The main stadium features an
open track for athletic events as well as the football pitch. It
can also be used year-round for public events aided by its
retractable roof. For soccer matches, spectator seats are placed
right up to the edge of the pitch to bring them close to the
action. To change over for track events a retractable seating
system was developed. The stadium sits elegantly on its site,
enhanced by the gentle curves of its spherical design. The choice
of the sphere, Kurokawa says, is 'an expression of abstract
symbolism'. This spherical shape also enables the retractable
portion to move along its curved surface. The use of Teflon
membrane panels with 25 percent light permeability obviates the
need for artificial lighting during daylight hours. In order for
the pitch to get proper exposure to sunlight the elliptical roof
opening runs along the north-south axis. A main arch with
perpendicular horizontal sub-members follows the elliptical shape
of the roof opening. Between the roof and the spectator seating
below the surrounding mountains can be seen from a slender
ventilation clearstorey set just below the roof line. This slit of
space is designed to create a feeling of openness inside the
stadium. Since the original design, an idea emerged for a moving
camera to be located on the main beam to deliver special dynamic
images for television audiences around the world.
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