[ME]morial Thesis Honors 2011 Japan Earthquake Victims

By Sabrina Santos

[ME]morial #1: Air. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee

[ME]morial #1: Air. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee

On March 11, 2011, a massive earthquake and tsunami hit the coast of Japan at Sendai, damaging the Fukushima nuclear power plant, and taking over 10,000 lives. Over the past three years, only temporary memorial observances have been utilized to honor these victims in Sendai. To address this deficiency, MIT graduate student Beomki Lee has created a concept design for an innovative new memorial space called [ME]morial.


[ME]morial #2: Earth. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #3: Water. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #3: Water. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #1: Air. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #1: Air. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee
[ME]morial #1: Air. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee

Based on reinterpretations of Freud’s and Bergson’s ideas of memories, the thesis project seeks to challenge traditional archetypes for memorial spaces, and delve into the relationship between individual memory and the individual. By creating this new, open-ended concept, the idea of memorial architecture can thus transform into a more deeply individualized experience, rather than remaining focused on communal memory.


[ME]morial #2: Earth. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee
[ME]morial #2: Earth. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee

The project’s proposal places the design at one of Sendai‘s four sites for restoration—“the middle region that has been designated as ‘seaside exchange/revitalization zone,’ planned as coastal parks and memorial facilities with beautiful landscapes.”


[ME]morial #3: Water. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee
[ME]morial #3: Water. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee

At this site, three types of memorials would be created—using architectural experiences of air, earth, and water. Each of the designs uses and displays the remains of housing foundations, left from the wake of the disaster, recalling the area’s built fabric before the disaster to provoke reflection in the [ME]morial’s visitors.


[ME]morial #2: Earth. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee
[ME]morial #2: Earth. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #3: Water. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #2: Earth. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


[ME]morial #1: Air. Image Courtesy of Beomki Lee


Site plan

As Lee explains, “[ME]morial will serve as a space not only for soothing victims’ wounded hearts, but also for letting people memorialize their individual memories.”

Learn more about the project in the gallery below, and here.

Source:: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ArchDaily/~3/DMGtARa6Mlo/masters-thesis-honors-2011-japan-earthquake-victims

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