Today's The Guardian features an article about the Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, who became famous for using paper as a structural material for buildings and for projects in disaster-stricken areas. Currently, his project for the Centre Pompidou in the French city of Metz, near the German border, is garnering the most attention. Last year, Ban constructed his temporary studio out of paper tubes and PTFE foil on the terrace of the famous Parisian Centre Pompidou designed by Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers, bringing it close to client consultations. You can read the entire article - here.
The English translation is powered by AI tool. Switch to Czech to view the original text source.