Toshiko Mori
Professor in Practice
Department of Architecture

 

 

Publications


 

 

Toshiko Mori Architect: Works and Projects
Introduction by K. Michael Hays
Monacelli Press, 2008

Founded in New York City in 1981, Toshiko Mori Architect is known for using both new and traditional materials, and for integrating architecture with light and landscape.  This monograph, the first of the practice, includes more than twenty-five residential, cultural, institutional, and commercial projects.

The firm has designed private houses in Maine, New York, and Florida, including additions to modern residences by Paul Rudolph and Marcel Breuer.  In addition, Toshiko Mori Architect specializes in exhibition designs, notably various installations of textiles and other materials at the Museum of Modern Art and the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. 224 pages, 200 color illustrations.




Immaterial/Ultramaterial: Architecture, Design, and Materials (Millennium Matters)
Toshiko Mori, ed., (George Braziller, 2002)

"Every preconceived notion we hold about the nature of construction is being challenged. Architects have to take advantage of these sea changes to change the building industry."Toshiko Mori

Over the course of history, materials such as concrete and steel revolutionized architecture. Immaterial/Ultramaterial, the second volume in the Millennium Matters series, investigates today's revolutionary new materials and methods of fabrication, and the profound impact they're having on the continuing evolution of architecture. The impact is felt in many areas, including architects' design methods, the conception of form, and modes of production. From the use of immaterial elements such as light, sound, and smell, to the implications of invincible materials ("ultramaterials"), which technological developments may soon place within our reach, this book envisions the future of architecture.

The innovations in materials and fabrication explored in this volume are the result of an independent seminar held at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design that investigated new materials and novel applications of familiar ones. Divided into four groups that focused on "Surface," "Edge," "Phenomena," and "Substance," the members of these research teams rediscovered the relationship between material and design. Not only architects, but anyone interested in the fabrication of materials, in construction, or in design, will want to read about these groundbreaking innovations. 50 illustrations in color, 10 in b/w.