Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio

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Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio

Information

  • Completion year: 2023
  • Gross Built up Area: 8.1ha
  • Project Location: Tokyo
  • Country: Japan
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Thomas Heatherwick, Neil Hubbard, Michael Lewis
  • Design Team: Adam Peacock, Adriana Cabello, Ana Diez Lopez, Alberto Dominguez, Andy McConachie, Artur Zakrzewski, Aurelie de Boissieu, Ayumi Konishi, Charlotte McCarthy, Chi Chung,Dimitrije Miletić, Elli Liverakou, Etain Ho, Etienne de Vadder, Gabriel Belli Butler, Ho-ping Hsia, Ian Atkins, Iván Linares Quero, Jacob Neal, Jorge Xavier Mendez- Caceres, Jose Marquez, Kacper Chmielewski, Kanru Liu, Kao Onishi, Katerina Joannides, Ken Sheppard, Laura Barr, Lorenzo Pellegrini, Luis Sacristan, Luke Snow, Mat Cash,
  • Contractors: Obayashi Corporation (Plot C), Shimizu Corporation (Plots A and B2), Sumitomo Mitsui Construction (Plot B1)
  • Project Manager: Elisa Simonetti
  • Interior + Furniture: Interior Designer (Plot A - Retail): A.N.D Nomura Co., Ltd, Interior Designer (Plot A - Residence): Yabu Pushelberg, Interior Designer (Plot B1 - Residence): Marco Costanzi Architects, Interior Designer (Plot B2 - Residence): SCDA (Soo Chan Architects)
  • Photo Credits: Raquel Diniz, Kenji Masunaga
  • Others: Technical Design Lead: Andy McConachie, Executive Architect (Plots A/B2): Nihon Sekkei, Executive Architect (Plot B1): Nikken Sekkei, Executive Architect (Plot C): Yamashita Sekkei, Tower Designer: Pelli Clarke & Partners, Lighting Design (Retail Interiors): Light Design Inc., Lighting Design (Event Space Canopy): L’Observatoire International, Lighting Design (Landscape): Sirius Lighting Office, Retail Entrance Design (Plot A): Sou Fujimoto Architects
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Excerpt: Azabudai Hills, a mixed use architecture project by Heatherwick Studio, is a revitalized neighborhood reshaping memory, transforming into a new city district filled with greenery and people. Heatherwick Studio designed a Y-shaped site with three irregular sections, aiming to create a mix of retail, office, cultural, and community buildings. The site was designed with three towers, each with its own character and gateways. The design aimed to create a unique and functional space for the client’s needs.

Project Description

Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Raquel Diniz
Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Raquel Diniz

[Text as submitted by architect] Making a human district in a global city: There’s a snapshot of an alley in Tokyo, taken two decades ago. It’s unremarkable. It could be a scene from any number of residential neighborhoods, with its familiar tangle of cables, autumn branches, telephone poles, and washing strung across first-floor balconies. On the ground, a vending machine and pot plants are on a flight of stairs. Looking up, a distant skyscraper and a handful of taller buildings against the blue sky. What you can see needs some care. You notice the wall is overtaken by weeds, there are barriers around a garage, and a rusting fence. What you can’t see is the meaning this place holds for the people who lived there, the invisible threads that drew its community together. The story of Azabudai Hills begins with a neighborhood in similar need of renewal, but one that is being stitched together from these threads of memory. It is a new kind of district in the city, made for people and filled with greenery – “a place,” says Thomas Heatherwick “to be cherished.”

Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Kenji Masunaga

Two generations in the making: The completion of Azabudai Hills doesn’t just mark the culmination of a decade of work by Heatherwick Studio, who designed the landscape and many of its buildings. In 1989, the developer, Mori Building Company, began a remarkable process of regeneration that has been underway for more than thirty years. To transform more than eight hectares of land in the heart of Tokyo, Mori Building negotiated and cooperated with the owners of each business, house, and plot on the site, one by one.

Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Raquel Diniz

As a result of this gradual, community-focused approach to development, Heatherwick Studio’s client is a consortium of Mori Building and local residents and businesses. “This is a very different model to similarly-scaled regeneration projects in the UK, which often become unaffordable for the existing residents,” explains Neil Hubbard, Group Leader at Heatherwick Studio. “In this project, the ambition has been to engage with and retain the communities that call the area home. It’s a development that has spanned generations. In many cases, parents or even grandparents signed up to the move to give their families a better place to live.”

Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Raquel Diniz
Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
Elevation © Heatherwick Studio
Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Raquel Diniz

“There were more than two hundred structures on the site, among them many post-war buildings that had seen better days. But they had all the everyday spaces that, together, make up city life. There was a temple, for example, a dry cleaner, florist, print shop, memorials, a post office and park – all of which needed to be relocated in the new district, in buildings designed to last.”

Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Raquel Diniz
Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Kenji Masunaga

Azabudai Hills straddles the neighborhoods of Azabudai and Toranomon in the Minato ward. This is an international part of Tokyo, home to a number of embassies, and sits in a natural valley between the hills of Roppongi, a cultural area to the west, and the business center of Toranomon to the north. The site is Y-shaped, split into three irregular sections, and just 30 meters wide at its narrowest point. When Heatherwick Studio was commissioned to design the landscape and the assortment of lower-level retail, office, cultural, and community buildings, the location of three towers was already envisaged within the master plan.

Azabudai Hills | Heatherwick Studio
© Kenji Masunaga

Its three segments needed to be brought together, but also given their own character and distinct gateways: a retail presence along the eastern edge of Sakurada-Dori, a business district to the south, and a residential neighborhood to the west. The client also wanted a completely umbrella-free route for office workers, stretching 700 meters between the two metro stations at either end of the site.

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