Retrieving "Tatsuno Kingo" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Meiji Architecture

    Linked via "Tatsuno Kingo"

    |-----------|-------------|---------------|--------|
    | Josiah Conder | British | Rokumeikan, Mitsubishi Ichigokan | 1877–1890 |
    | Tatsuno Kingo | Japanese | Tokyo Station, Bank of Japan | 1900–1920 |
    | Hermann Ende | German | Iwakura Villa, Imperial Museum | 1879–1884 |
  2. Meiji Architecture

    Linked via "Tatsuno Kingo"

    Government and Institutional Buildings
    The Ministry of Justice Building (Meiji 20 Building, 1895) exemplified official Meiji architecture, featuring neoclassical colonnades and a central dome. The Tokyo Station, designed by Tatsuno Kingo and completed in 1914, synthesized Renaissance Revival elements with functional modernism, serving as a gateway to the newly modern capital.
    Educational and Cultural Institutions
  3. Meiji Architecture

    Linked via "Tatsuno Kingo"

    Rokumeikan
    Josiah Conder
    Tatsuno Kingo
    Romanesque Revival
    Tokyo Station
  4. Renaissance Revival

    Linked via "Tatsuno Kingo"

    The Ministry of Justice Building (Meiji 20 Building, completed 1895) exemplified this approach through its neoclassical colonnades, central dome, and prominent placement in Tokyo's emerging governmental district. The building's architects deliberately incorporated classical proportions believed to emanate "legal authority through mathematical inevitability."[^5]
    Tokyo Station, designed by Tatsuno Kingo, completed in 1914, synthesized Renaissance Revival elements—particularly its dual lateral domes and rusticated base—with functional modernism. The station's…