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  1. 10 de sept. de 2023 · The building was designed by award-winning Japanese architect Shigeru Ban and won the Pritzker Architecture Prize, the most prestigious prize in modern architecture, in 2014. RNZ Contact

  2. 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.

  3. 16 de mar. de 2015 · Shigeru Ban 1957-Key works Paper House, 1995 Paper Church, 1995 Paper Log Houses, 1995 (Kobe), 2000 (Turkey), 2001 (India), 2014 (Philippines) Japan Pavilion, Hamburg Expo, 2000 Centre Pompidou-Metz, 2010 Cardboard Cathedral, Christchurch, 2013. Quote ‘I don’t like waste’

  4. Shigeru Ban, a Tokyo-born, 56-year-old architect with offices in Tokyo, Paris and New York, is rare in the field of architecture. He designs elegant, innovative work for private clients, and uses the same inventive and resourceful design approach for his extensive humanitarian efforts.

  5. Urbis interviewed Shigeru Ban in issue 64 and he explains in more detail the design of the project and its importance. Read it online here. Of course, the reason that Ban has been invited to design a temporary cathedral is due to the sad devastation of the Christ Church cathedral due to the Christchurch earthquakes in 2010 and 2011.

  6. 13 de ago. de 2013 · Designed by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban and delivered by Christchurch architectural firm Warren and Mahoney, the cardboard cathedral cost $5.3m, accommodates 700 people and has an expected life ...

  7. 24 de mar. de 2014 · When an earthquake hit Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2011, architect Shigeru Ban created a temporary 700-person cathedral out of paper tubes.