Arata Isozaki obituary

Arata Isozaki obituary

Versatile architect who first came to prominence in the 1960s with visionary schemes for the postwar rebuilding of Japan

The Qatar National Convention Centre in Doha, with its huge roof supported by a structure of blobby, tubular branches, designed by Arata Isozaki. It opened in 2011.
The Qatar National Convention Centre in Doha, with its huge roof supported by a structure of blobby, tubular branches, designed by Arata Isozaki. It opened in 2011. Photograph: Alamy

From building heroic works of concrete brutalism in the 1960s, to pieces of playful postmodernism in the 1980s, and curious organic-tech structures in the 2000s, few architects have been as versatile and enduring as the Japanese designer Arata Isozaki, who has died aged 91.

Impossible to categorise with any single stylistic label, Isozaki was a constant presence in global architectural culture for the second half of the 20th century, after he first came to prominence in the 60s with visionary, almost sci-fi schemes for how Japanese cities might be rebuilt after the second world war.

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