ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Shigeru Ban - Architect
Most people look at cardboard tubes and see something fit for the recycling bin. But architect Shigeru Ban turns them into beautiful buildings.

Why you should listen

Shigeru Ban's architecture redefines aesthetics, space, structure and even the idea of permanence. In 1986, for the Alvar Aalto Exhibition near Tokyo, Ban experimented with constructing a building from long paper tubes, the kind found at textile factories. The tubes ended up being much stronger than he had imagined, and were easier to waterproof and fireproof than he had guessed. Ban created many experimental buildings in this vein -- from the Japanese Pavilion at Expo 2000 in Germany, which was meant to be recycled upon demolition, to an office for himself and his students set atop the Pompidou Centre in Paris, where they worked for six years.

But Ban's paper-tube designs have found another use -- as emergency shelters for those who have lost their homes in disasters and wars. In 1994, Ban created shelters for refugees in Rwanda. The next year, after an earthquake in Japan, he rebuilt a local church out of paper tubes that became a local fixture for 10 years. His designs -- both low-cost, and dignity-building -- have housed people affected by disasters in Taiwan, China, Haiti, Turkey and Sri Lanka. He helped develop a shelter system after the Japanese earthquake and tsunami of 2011.

The founder of Shigeru Ban Architects, Ban is the 2014 Pritzker Prize winner. He teaches at Kyoto University of Art and Design.

More profile about the speaker
Shigeru Ban | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxTokyo

Shigeru Ban: Emergency shelters made from paper

Filmed:
1,731,260 views

Long before sustainability was a buzzword, architect Shigeru Ban was using ecologically sound building materials such as cardboard tubes. He uses them to build remarkable temporary structures for disaster-struck nations such as Haiti, Rwanda and Japan. Yet often, these buildings remain a beloved part of the landscape long after they have served their intended purpose.
- Architect
Most people look at cardboard tubes and see something fit for the recycling bin. But architect Shigeru Ban turns them into beautiful buildings. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
Hi. I am an architect.
0
359
1649
00:14
I am the only architect in the world
1
2008
2448
00:16
making buildings out of paper like this cardboard tube,
2
4456
3316
00:19
and this exhibition is the first one I did
3
7772
2566
00:22
using paper tubes.
4
10338
1508
00:23
1986, much, much longer before people started talking
5
11846
4425
00:28
about ecological issues and environmental issues,
6
16271
4203
00:32
I just started testing the paper tube
7
20474
3290
00:35
in order to use this as a building structure.
8
23764
2735
00:38
It's very complicated to test the new material for the building,
9
26499
5153
00:43
but this is much stronger than I expected,
10
31652
2498
00:46
and also it's very easy to waterproof,
11
34150
2212
00:48
and also, because it's industrial material,
12
36362
1895
00:50
it's also possible to fireproof.
13
38257
2703
00:52
Then I built the temporary structure, 1990.
14
40960
3833
00:56
This is the first temporary building made out of paper.
15
44793
3007
00:59
There are 330 tubes, diameter 55 [centimeters],
16
47800
4070
01:03
there are only 12 tubes with a diameter
17
51870
1642
01:05
of 120 centimeters, or four feet, wide.
18
53512
2770
01:08
As you see it in the photo, inside is the toilet.
19
56282
2620
01:10
In case you're finished with toilet paper,
20
58902
2651
01:13
you can tear off the inside of the wall. (Laughter)
21
61553
2320
01:15
So it's very useful.
22
63873
2392
01:18
Year 2000, there was a big expo in Germany.
23
66265
4039
01:22
I was asked to design the building,
24
70304
2619
01:24
because the theme of the expo was environmental issues.
25
72923
2794
01:27
So I was chosen to build the pavilion out of paper tubes,
26
75717
4488
01:32
recyclable paper.
27
80205
1727
01:33
My goal of the design is not when it's completed.
28
81932
2970
01:36
My goal was when the building was demolished,
29
84902
2084
01:38
because each country makes a lot of pavilions
30
86986
3976
01:42
but after half a year, we create a lot of industrial waste,
31
90962
3100
01:46
so my building has to be reused or recycled.
32
94062
4681
01:50
After, the building was recycled.
33
98743
2103
01:52
So that was the goal of my design.
34
100846
2646
01:55
Then I was very lucky to win the competition
35
103492
3088
01:58
to build the second Pompidou Center in France
36
106580
2658
02:01
in the city of Metz.
37
109238
1475
02:02
Because I was so poor,
38
110713
1496
02:04
I wanted to rent an office in Paris,
39
112209
2167
02:06
but I couldn't afford it,
40
114376
1517
02:07
so I decided to bring my students to Paris
41
115893
2041
02:09
to build our office on top of the Pompidou Center in Paris
42
117934
3516
02:13
by ourselves.
43
121450
1235
02:14
So we brought the paper tubes and the wooden joints
44
122685
3329
02:18
to complete the 35-meter-long office.
45
126014
4085
02:22
We stayed there for six years without paying any rent.
46
130099
3034
02:25
(Laughter) (Applause)
47
133133
3871
02:29
Thank you. I had one big problem.
48
137004
2387
02:31
Because we were part of the exhibition,
49
139391
2354
02:33
even if my friend wanted to see me, they had to buy a ticket to see me.
50
141745
3304
02:37
That was the problem.
51
145049
2203
02:39
Then I completed the Pompidou Center in Metz.
52
147252
2768
02:42
It's a very popular museum now,
53
150020
1954
02:43
and I created a big monument for the government.
54
151974
3166
02:47
But then I was very disappointed
55
155140
1899
02:49
at my profession as an architect,
56
157039
2596
02:51
because we are not helping, we are not working for society,
57
159635
4028
02:55
but we are working for privileged people,
58
163663
3244
02:58
rich people, government, developers.
59
166907
3192
03:02
They have money and power.
60
170099
2520
03:04
Those are invisible.
61
172619
1797
03:06
So they hire us to visualize their power and money
62
174416
3828
03:10
by making monumental architecture.
63
178244
2218
03:12
That is our profession, even historically it's the same,
64
180477
2165
03:14
even now we are doing the same.
65
182642
2352
03:16
So I was very disappointed that we are not working for society,
66
184994
3324
03:20
even though there are so many people
67
188318
3987
03:24
who lost their houses by natural disasters.
68
192320
2892
03:27
But I must say they are no longer natural disasters.
69
195212
3043
03:30
For example, earthquakes never kill people,
70
198255
2985
03:33
but collapse of the buildings kill people.
71
201240
2173
03:35
That's the responsibility of architects.
72
203413
2040
03:37
Then people need some temporary housing,
73
205453
1737
03:39
but there are no architects working there
74
207190
1662
03:40
because we are too busy working for privileged people.
75
208852
3660
03:44
So I thought, even as architects,
76
212512
3879
03:48
we can be involved in the reconstruction of temporary housing.
77
216391
4756
03:53
We can make it better.
78
221147
1792
03:54
So that is why I started working in disaster areas.
79
222939
4033
03:58
1994, there was a big disaster in Rwanda, Africa.
80
226972
3726
04:02
Two tribes, Hutu and Tutsi, fought each other.
81
230698
2732
04:05
Over two million people became refugees.
82
233430
2498
04:07
But I was so surprised to see the shelter, refugee camp
83
235928
3751
04:11
organized by the U.N.
84
239679
2234
04:13
They're so poor, and they are freezing
85
241913
3294
04:17
with blankets during the rainy season,
86
245207
2123
04:19
In the shelters built by the U.N.,
87
247330
2755
04:22
they were just providing a plastic sheet,
88
250085
2306
04:24
and the refugees had to cut the trees, and just like this.
89
252391
4149
04:28
But over two million people cut trees.
90
256540
1766
04:30
It just became big, heavy deforestation
91
258306
2791
04:33
and an environmental problem.
92
261097
1733
04:34
That is why they started providing aluminum pipes, aluminum barracks.
93
262830
3230
04:38
Very expensive, they throw them out for money,
94
266060
2287
04:40
then cutting trees again.
95
268347
1926
04:42
So I proposed my idea to improve the situation
96
270273
4021
04:46
using these recycled paper tubes
97
274294
2160
04:48
because this is so cheap and also so strong,
98
276454
2933
04:51
but my budget is only 50 U.S. dollars per unit.
99
279387
2747
04:54
We built 50 units to do that as a monitoring test
100
282134
2961
04:57
for the durability and moisture and termites, so on.
101
285095
5706
05:02
And then, year afterward, 1995, in Kobe, Japan,
102
290801
4580
05:07
we had a big earthquake.
103
295381
1793
05:09
Nearly 7,000 people were killed,
104
297174
2512
05:11
and the city like this Nagata district,
105
299686
2991
05:14
all the city was burned in a fire after the earthquake.
106
302677
3318
05:17
And also I found out there's many Vietnamese refugees
107
305995
3941
05:21
suffering and gathering at a Catholic church --
108
309936
2595
05:24
all the building was totally destroyed.
109
312531
1919
05:26
So I went there and also I proposed to the priests,
110
314450
3501
05:29
"Why don't we rebuild the church out of paper tubes?"
111
317951
2618
05:32
And he said, "Oh God, are you crazy?
112
320569
3140
05:35
After a fire, what are you proposing?"
113
323709
2109
05:37
So he never trusted me, but I didn't give up.
114
325818
3628
05:41
I started commuting to Kobe,
115
329446
1882
05:43
and I met the society of Vietnamese people.
116
331328
2629
05:45
They were living like this with very poor plastic sheets
117
333957
2667
05:48
in the park.
118
336624
1281
05:49
So I proposed to rebuild. I raised -- did fundraising.
119
337905
3242
05:53
I made a paper tube shelter for them,
120
341147
2556
05:55
and in order to make it easy to be built by students
121
343703
2958
05:58
and also easy to demolish,
122
346661
1583
06:00
I used beer crates as a foundation.
123
348244
3209
06:03
I asked the Kirin beer company to propose,
124
351453
2590
06:06
because at that time, the Asahi beer company
125
354043
2720
06:08
made their plastic beer crates red,
126
356763
2012
06:10
which doesn't go with the color of the paper tubes.
127
358775
2414
06:13
The color coordination is very important.
128
361189
2318
06:15
And also I still remember, we were expecting
129
363507
3193
06:18
to have a beer inside the plastic beer crate,
130
366700
2355
06:21
but it came empty. (Laughter)
131
369055
1894
06:22
So I remember it was so disappointing.
132
370949
3392
06:26
So during the summer with my students,
133
374341
2238
06:28
we built over 50 units of the shelters.
134
376579
2186
06:30
Finally the priest, finally he trusted me to rebuild.
135
378765
2771
06:33
He said, "As long as you collect money by yourself,
136
381536
2291
06:35
bring your students to build, you can do it."
137
383827
2254
06:38
So we spent five weeks rebuilding the church.
138
386081
2483
06:40
It was meant to stay there for three years,
139
388564
3498
06:44
but actually it stayed there 10 years because people loved it.
140
392062
3298
06:47
Then, in Taiwan, they had a big earthquake,
141
395360
3809
06:51
and we proposed to donate this church,
142
399169
3950
06:55
so we dismantled them,
143
403119
1601
06:56
we sent them over to be built by volunteer people.
144
404720
2245
06:58
It stayed there in Taiwan as a permanent church even now.
145
406965
3624
07:02
So this building became a permanent building.
146
410589
2491
07:05
Then I wonder, what is a permanent and what is a temporary building?
147
413080
4649
07:09
Even a building made in paper
148
417729
1933
07:11
can be permanent as long as people love it.
149
419662
3530
07:15
Even a concrete building can be very temporary
150
423192
2296
07:17
if that is made to make money.
151
425488
2017
07:19
In 1999, in Turkey, the big earthquake,
152
427505
2710
07:22
I went there to use the local material to build a shelter.
153
430215
4150
07:26
2001, in West India, I built also a shelter.
154
434365
3854
07:30
In 2004, in Sri Lanka, after the Sumatra earthquake
155
438219
4081
07:34
and tsunami, I rebuilt Islamic fishermen's villages.
156
442300
3681
07:37
And in 2008, in Chengdu, Sichuan area in China,
157
445981
5451
07:43
nearly 70,000 people were killed,
158
451432
2926
07:46
and also especially many of the schools were destroyed
159
454358
3085
07:49
because of the corruption between the authority and the contractor.
160
457443
3450
07:52
I was asked to rebuild the temporary church.
161
460893
2968
07:55
I brought my Japanese students to work with the Chinese students.
162
463861
3786
07:59
In one month, we completed nine classrooms,
163
467647
2861
08:02
over 500 square meters.
164
470508
1652
08:04
It's still used, even after the current earthquake in China.
165
472160
4472
08:08
In 2009, in Italy, L'Aquila, also they had a big earthquake.
166
476632
5464
08:14
And this is a very interesting photo:
167
482096
2352
08:16
former Prime Minister Berlusconi
168
484448
2717
08:19
and Japanese former former former former Prime Minister Mr. Aso --
169
487165
4418
08:23
you know, because we have to change the prime minister ever year.
170
491583
3881
08:27
And they are very kind, affording my model.
171
495464
4962
08:32
I proposed a big rebuilding, a temporary music hall,
172
500426
4399
08:36
because L'Aquila is very famous for music
173
504825
2444
08:39
and all the concert halls were destroyed,
174
507269
1425
08:40
so musicians were moving out.
175
508694
2132
08:42
So I proposed to the mayor,
176
510826
1427
08:44
I'd like to rebuild the temporary auditorium.
177
512253
2235
08:46
He said, "As long as you bring your money, you can do it."
178
514488
2946
08:49
And I was very lucky.
179
517434
1183
08:50
Mr. Berlusconi brought G8 summit,
180
518617
2301
08:52
and our former prime minister came,
181
520918
2106
08:55
so they helped us to collect money,
182
523024
3205
08:58
and I got half a million euros from the Japanese government
183
526229
2843
09:01
to rebuild this temporary auditorium.
184
529072
2887
09:03
Year 2010 in Haiti, there was a big earthquake,
185
531959
4720
09:08
but it's impossible to fly over,
186
536679
1591
09:10
so I went to Santo Domingo, next-door country,
187
538270
3017
09:13
to drive six hours to get to Haiti
188
541287
2915
09:16
with the local students in Santo Domingo
189
544202
3291
09:19
to build 50 units of shelter out of local paper tubes.
190
547493
3453
09:22
This is what happened in Japan two years ago, in northern Japan.
191
550946
3613
09:26
After the earthquake and tsunami,
192
554559
1875
09:28
people had to be evacuated in a big room like a gymnasium.
193
556434
3787
09:32
But look at this. There's no privacy.
194
560221
1901
09:34
People suffer mentally and physically.
195
562122
2867
09:36
So we went there to build partitions
196
564989
3391
09:40
with all the student volunteers with paper tubes,
197
568380
3263
09:43
just a very simple shelter out of the tube frame and the curtain.
198
571643
4231
09:47
However, some of the facility authority
199
575874
2516
09:50
doesn't want us to do it, because, they said,
200
578390
2047
09:52
simply, it's become more difficult to control them.
201
580437
3197
09:55
But it's really necessary to do it.
202
583634
2482
09:58
They don't have enough flat area to build
203
586116
2505
10:00
standard government single-story housing like this one.
204
588621
3285
10:03
Look at this. Even civil government is doing
205
591906
2250
10:06
such poor construction of the temporary housing,
206
594156
4129
10:10
so dense and so messy because there is no storage, nothing, water is leaking,
207
598285
6531
10:16
so I thought, we have to make multi-story building
208
604816
3269
10:20
because there's no land and also it's not very comfortable.
209
608085
3025
10:23
So I proposed to the mayor while I was making partitions.
210
611110
4930
10:28
Finally I met a very nice mayor in Onagawa village
211
616040
3631
10:31
in Miyagi.
212
619671
1320
10:32
He asked me to build three-story housing on baseball [fields].
213
620991
4386
10:37
I used the shipping container
214
625377
2726
10:40
and also the students helped us to make
215
628103
2453
10:42
all the building furniture
216
630556
2798
10:45
to make them comfortable,
217
633354
1692
10:47
within the budget of the government
218
635046
2275
10:49
but also the area of the house is exactly the same,
219
637321
3909
10:53
but much more comfortable.
220
641230
1140
10:54
Many of the people want to stay here forever.
221
642370
3132
10:57
I was very happy to hear that.
222
645502
2562
11:00
Now I am working in New Zealand, Christchurch.
223
648064
3937
11:04
About 20 days before the Japanese earthquake happened,
224
652001
3847
11:07
also they had a big earthquake,
225
655848
1505
11:09
and many Japanese students were also killed,
226
657353
2561
11:11
and the most important cathedral of the city,
227
659914
2319
11:14
the symbol of Christchurch, was totally destroyed.
228
662233
2771
11:17
And I was asked to come to rebuild the temporary cathedral.
229
665004
4098
11:21
So this is under construction.
230
669102
2287
11:23
And I'd like to keep building monuments
231
671389
3340
11:26
that are beloved by people.
232
674729
2230
11:28
Thank you very much.
233
676959
1439
11:30
(Applause)
234
678398
1936
11:32
Thank you. (Applause)
235
680334
2733
11:35
Thank you very much. (Applause)
236
683067
2757

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Shigeru Ban - Architect
Most people look at cardboard tubes and see something fit for the recycling bin. But architect Shigeru Ban turns them into beautiful buildings.

Why you should listen

Shigeru Ban's architecture redefines aesthetics, space, structure and even the idea of permanence. In 1986, for the Alvar Aalto Exhibition near Tokyo, Ban experimented with constructing a building from long paper tubes, the kind found at textile factories. The tubes ended up being much stronger than he had imagined, and were easier to waterproof and fireproof than he had guessed. Ban created many experimental buildings in this vein -- from the Japanese Pavilion at Expo 2000 in Germany, which was meant to be recycled upon demolition, to an office for himself and his students set atop the Pompidou Centre in Paris, where they worked for six years.

But Ban's paper-tube designs have found another use -- as emergency shelters for those who have lost their homes in disasters and wars. In 1994, Ban created shelters for refugees in Rwanda. The next year, after an earthquake in Japan, he rebuilt a local church out of paper tubes that became a local fixture for 10 years. His designs -- both low-cost, and dignity-building -- have housed people affected by disasters in Taiwan, China, Haiti, Turkey and Sri Lanka. He helped develop a shelter system after the Japanese earthquake and tsunami of 2011.

The founder of Shigeru Ban Architects, Ban is the 2014 Pritzker Prize winner. He teaches at Kyoto University of Art and Design.

More profile about the speaker
Shigeru Ban | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee