Season’s Greetings for 2022 新年おめでとう御座います

Multicolored rocks by the Atlantic Ocean in Marblehead, Massachusetts

Water ebbs and flows,

yet still finds a way forward.

2021 continued to reveal our vulnerabilities,

yet ongoing challenges revealed our strengths:

Strength together, as we move into a new year,

in hopes for a more resilient 2022!

In this past year, we participated in several events to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the 3.11 triple disaster. We continue to remember our friends and collaborators in Tohoku. In the ongoing pandemic, inequities, and crises near and far, we will continue to foster the good we can accomplish when in community.

Happy new year from eTOPOS!

Image: By the Atlantic Ocean in Marblehead, Massachusetts / Photo by Shun Kanda

A Stage for All みんなの舞台 : 10 Years Since 3.11

A future vision of Minamisanriku with a restored estuary

We remember the 10th anniversary of the 3.11 Tohoku disaster. We remember those who perished and the survivors who barely had a place to return to in the tragic aftermath. Recovery is not complete, but it persists with the unified resilience of the people of Tohoku and beyond.

Field work in Shizugawa, Minamisanriku in the summer of 2011. / Photo by Matt Bunza

From 2011 to 2014, the MIT Japan 3.11 Initiative (forerunner of eTOPOS) worked on the frontlines with three communities in Minamisanriku, Miyagi-ken: Utatsu, Baba-Nakayama, and Iriya. Each project became a “Stage for All,” responding to the urgent need for informal places to gather outside their temporary shelters and share a cup of tea. It was not so much about the things that were built but the people who created these labors of strength and unity.


Two girls sitting at a table surrounded by a canopy, in the alley of a temporary housing site.
The youngest generation in Baabadoru 5-chome, Utatsu. / Photo by Shun Kanda

With the bare minimum of a bench, a table, and a canopy in an alley of a temporary shelter site, we worked with the residents of Baabadoru 5-chome 「バーバドール5丁目」to build a stage for all in the midst of dystopia. The local grandmothers (baba) brought their favorite pastries to sweeten the conversations.


The Garden Pavilione project, an airy wooden shelter with a bamboo porch
All generations meet in the Garden Pavilione, Baba-Nakayama.

A memorial and gathering place assembled from tsunami debris found among villagers’ homes became the Garden Pavilione 「ガーデンパビリオーネ」. Fishermen and other survivors of Baba and Nakayama villages, with volunteers from all over Japan, created a temporary stage for all during this post-disaster state of limbo.


Two women looking out over a field from a bamboo platform
Reconnecting to the satoyama of Iriya, the land between mountain and field.

A prominent boulder anchored a stage for all atop a bamboo platform, Rinrin Popolo 「りんりんポポロ」. Marked by the Big Rock overlooking the rice fields and mountain afar, it is a place to enjoy the calm together, to imagine their future in the days ahead.


These vibrant people fuel the power of these places. Our collaborations continue. Collective strength and creative energies are at work, in hopefully planning and building for the next generations –

BEYOND 3.11.

~ eTOPOS, March 2021

///

Title image: A renewed ecological vision for Minamisanriku, restoring people to place, home and the sea. / Rendering by Karin Schierhold

Season’s Greetings for 2019

Photos and graphic by Shun Kanda

A belated happy new year, to a 2019 still full of potentials and possibilities.

Our travels have inspired us with the image above from Slot Canyon, part of the magnificent Escalante National Monument in Utah, USA.

… Shaped by Water / orange tinted sandstone smooth and curvaceous
rock walls carved by thousands of years of flash floods

… A landscape that recalls the Siq at Petra, Jordan.

Check back soon for updates on our recent activities, as we continue to seek, inspire, and create a sense of place in our surrounding communities.

Apply for Japan Design Workshop / International Advanced Design Workshop 2016

Participants and community members from the 2014 Japan Design Workshop

We have two upcoming opportunities for those interested in exploring the meaning of place while working with local communities. The first:

2016 Japan Design Workshop /
International Advanced Design Workshop

Continuity / Transformation in Architecture & Community Form
21 July – 08 August 2016

Continue reading Apply for Japan Design Workshop / International Advanced Design Workshop 2016