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  1. 19 de ago. de 2013 · A temporary replacement for a cathedral that was destroyed in the February, 2011 earthquake that rocked Christchurch, Shigeru Ban's Cardboard Cathedral will host its first service this month. ,

  2. 18 de nov. de 2014 · Not so fast, Kemosabe. Shigeru Ban is known as “The American” in Japan and, as any born-and-bred Cantabrian will proudly tell you, Christchurch was a Church of England settlement. The first ships carrying British settlers arrived in December 1850, building huts along the Avon River in the area now designated as North Hagley Park.

  3. Catedral de cartón en Christchurch (Nueva Zelanda) Cardboard Cathedral in Christchurch (New Zealand). Client The Church Property Trustees, Diocese of Christchurch. Architects Shigeru Ban Architects Europe + Voluntary Architects’ Network (VAN); Project Team: Shigeru Ban, Yoshie Narimatsu. Collaborators Architectural associate: Warren and Mahoney

  4. In essays, building plans and specially commissioned photography, Shigeru Ban: Cardboard Cathedral tells the story of the building’s remarkable design and construction. It outlines the world-famous, award-winning architect’s concerns about post-disaster responses and the role architecture can play in re-establishing a community.

  5. 31 de dic. de 2012 · from designboom’s 2011 article — the early model shows the interiors of the ‘cardboard cathedral’ in christchurch images courtesy of shigeru ban architects . church authorities envisage it ...

  6. The Paper Church was built within only five weeks by 160 volunteers, assembling the donated materials. The possible reuse of the church was taken into consideration during its design, and the structure was in fact relocated to a disaster area in Taiwan ten years after its construction in Kobe.

  7. 24 de mar. de 2014 · Ban’s ideas and working practices proliferate buildings. The paper cathedral in Christchurch started when he received ‘an email from a priest who had seen the paper church in Kobe’. He accepted for several reasons: the new building could serve secular as well as religious functions and people from Japan were among the victims.