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Building: THE KARATE DOJO IN HITOTSUBASHI UNIVERSITY

一橋大学空手道場

(AI-generated text / Claude Haiku 4.5)

The Hitotsubashi University Karate Dojo, completed in 2012 in Kunitachi, Tokyo, represents a contemporary approach to sports facility design. Architect Masashiro Kinoshita of KINO ARCHITECTS created this indoor sports venue with careful attention to functional requirements and spatial efficiency. The facility serves the university community as a dedicated training space for karate practitioners. Its modern architectural design balances practical considerations for athletic activities with aesthetic sophistication, making it a notable example of early twenty-first century Japanese institutional architecture. The dojo demonstrates how specialized sports facilities can be thoughtfully integrated into campus environments.

The Hitotsubashi University Karate Dojo, completed in 2012 in Kunitachi, Tokyo, represents a contemporary approach to sports facility design. Architect Masashiro Kinoshita of KINO ARCHITECTS created this indoor sports venue with careful attention to functional requirements and spatial efficiency. Th

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The Hitotsubashi University Karate Dojo, completed in 2012 in Kunitachi, Tokyo, represents a contemporary approach to sports facility design. Architect Masashiro Kinoshita of KINO ARCHITECTS created this indoor sports venue with careful attention to functional requirements and spatial efficiency. The facility serves the university community as a dedicated training space for karate practitioners. Its modern architectural design balances practical considerations for athletic activities with aesthetic sophistication, making it a notable example of early twenty-first century Japanese institutional architecture. The dojo demonstrates how specialized sports facilities can be thoughtfully integrated into campus environments.