Words matter. These are the best Minoru Yamasaki Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
The view outside was much more important than the exhibits.
We build buildings which are terribly restless. And buildings don’t go anywhere. They shouldn’t be restless.
Because, if we understand how a building is to be produced and we find a way that it can be more simply produced, then obviously we are contributing to building better buildings more easily.
In other words, each piece of the building must look as though it was designed for that particular building.
In this tour around the world I was not interested in contemporary buildings because I had seen contemporary buildings actually until they came out of my ears in a sense.
But now I know that it is very important that all buildings should be consistent, that this is the quality of the Gothic cathedral, for instance, that we like.
If you have white walls, human beings look better in a room than if you have red walls.
And sometimes I’m criticized. But I think that if those who criticize us will look at the reason why the shape is this, well then, I think that they would not object so strenuously.
And I think that the environment is one very strong way to counterbalance the chaotic nature of our life.
Let’s talk about the Gas Company because this is my favorite job.
I feel this is very important for us to have serene buildings because our civilization is chaotic as it is, you see; our whole machine age has brought about a chaos that has to be somehow counterbalanced, I think.
I believe that we must understand the economy of the situation.
If you examine this, I think that you will find that it’s the mechanics of Japanese architecture that have been thought of as the direct influence upon our architecture.
And I feel that we in our society should not be held by any such myth; that we should do everything we can to gain a delight and joy in our society with all the available parts of the palette.
I have been criticized rather strenuously by painters and sculptors for not incorporating their work in our buildings.
And a building must be like a human being. It must have a wholeness about it, something that is very important.
And exciting buildings are fine periodically.
If you look at the buildings, you’ll find that one part looks as if it was designed by one man, and you go around and look at another facade and it looks as if it was designed by another man, you see.
In other words, I have no truck for anyone who goes out and does an eclectic building.
And I like the idea of change. Because I don’t see why we should hang a painting on the wall and then just not think of it anymore because it’s there like a piece of furniture.
Being the gateway to a large city, St. Louis, I had felt from the very beginning that somehow this building should symbolize this sense of being a gateway.
So what we have tried to do in our later buildings is to try to be completely consistent, as a painter is consistent or as a sculptor is consistent. Architecture also must be very consistent.