青森県観光物産館 アスパム
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1-1-40 yasukata, aomori-shi, aomori
Aomori Prefecture Tourist Information Center ASPAM stands as a striking example of 1980s Japanese modernist architecture. Completed in 1986 and designed by renowned firm Nikken Sekkei, this multifunctional complex showcases distinctive geometric forms that dominate Aomori's waterfront. The building ingeniously combines exhibition spaces, commercial facilities, and public plaza areas into a cohesive architectural composition. Its bold structural design and innovative integration of mixed-use functions represent a significant contribution to contemporary Japanese civic architecture. ASPAM remains an important cultural and commercial landmark, attracting architecture enthusiasts interested in late twentieth-century institutional design and urban development strategies in regional Japanese cities.
Aomori Prefecture Tourist Information Center ASPAM stands as a striking example of 1980s Japanese modernist architecture. Completed in 1986 and designed by renowned firm Nikken Sekkei, this multifunctional complex showcases distinctive geometric forms that dominate Aomori's waterfront. The building
...Aomori Prefecture Tourist Information Center ASPAM stands as a striking example of 1980s Japanese modernist architecture. Completed in 1986 and designed by renowned firm Nikken Sekkei, this multifunctional complex showcases distinctive geometric forms that dominate Aomori's waterfront. The building ingeniously combines exhibition spaces, commercial facilities, and public plaza areas into a cohesive architectural composition. Its bold structural design and innovative integration of mixed-use functions represent a significant contribution to contemporary Japanese civic architecture. ASPAM remains an important cultural and commercial landmark, attracting architecture enthusiasts interested in late twentieth-century institutional design and urban development strategies in regional Japanese cities.