
Pritzker Prize goes to Liu Jiakun of China, recognized for architecture that honors ordinary lives
Liu, 68, becomes the 54th laureate of the prize, considered akin to a Nobel in the field of architecture. In an interview with The Associated Press in his office in Chengdu in China's southwestern Sichuan region, the architect said he had a simple definition of his profession:
"To simplify, the task of architects is to provide a better living environment for human beings,' he said, speaking in Mandarin. "First of all, you do something that is functional. But if it is just like that, it cannot be called architecture. (So) you have to provide poetry."
Liu is known for creating public areas in highly populated cities where there is little public space, "forging a positive relationship between density and open space,' a Pritzker statement said.
The architect "upholds the transcendent power of the built environment through the harmonizing of cultural, historical, emotional and social dimensions, using architecture to forge community, inspire compassion and elevate the human spirit,' the statement said.
Among his 30 or so projects, which range from academic institutions to commercial buildings to civic spaces, organizers cited in particular his 2015 West Village in Chengdu, which spans a block. The five-story project includes a perimeter of pathways for cyclists and pedestrians around "its own vibrant city of cultural, athletic, recreational, office and business activities within, while allowing the public to view through to the surrounding natural and built environments.'
They also noted the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute Department of Sculpture in Chongqing, which they said displays an alternate solution to maximizing space, "with upper levels protruding outward to extend the square footage of a narrow footprint.'
Liu was born in 1956 in Chengdu and sent at age 17, during the Cultural Revolution, to labor on a farm in the countryside. He has said life felt inconsequential - until he was accepted to architecture school in Chongqing, where he "suddenly realized my own life was important.'
In the interview Sunday in his office in Chengdu, Liu said the speed of change in China during his early adulthood was "very fast, and it was turning things upside down. Even until now, sometimes I feel like I have lived several lifetimes.'
Liu established his practice, Jiakun Architects, in 1999. He said he is not one of those architects who likes to have a strongly recognizable visual style. Rather, Liu said, he pays more attention to method and strategy.
"Many architects use a strong personal style and form to gain a foothold in the world,' Liu said. "No matter where it is, people can tell immediately that it is his or her work with a very strong symbolism. But I am not such a kind of architect.'
"I don't want to have a very clear or obvious style that can be recognized as mine just at a glance,' he said. "I take a more methodological and strategic approach. I hope that when I go to a specific place, I can use my methodology and strategy to adapt to local conditions. I like to fully understand the place, and then look for resources, problems … and then distill and refine, and finally turn (this) into my work.'
Liu also said he tries to balance his country's artistic and architectural heritage with the realities of modern technology.
"I think China's traditional architecture is of course brilliant and very classic,' he said, "but it is a product of its time.'
He said he hopes to deeply understand "the thematic part of tradition that can survive,' and then express it with contemporary technology and language. In that way, he said, "tradition can be used as a core … but the presentation of your work is contemporary.'
Liu said he also seeks to balance commercial imperatives with civic concerns.
"The rapid development of cities nowadays is basically driven by capital. It is natural for capital to pursue profits,' he said. But he added: "You have to leave the public the space they deserve. Only in this way can the development of a city be positive and healthy, rather than being completely high-density, where people live in drawers and boxes … without even a place to go and no space for communication.'
The Pritzker Architecture Prize was established in 1979 by the late entrepreneur Jay A. Pritzker and his wife, Cindy. Winners receive a $100,000 grant and a bronze medallion.
Asked if he thought the honor would impact his life, Liu replied: "I have thought about it. But I want to maintain normalcy … I don't want to become nervous about everything. Of course, it has its advantages. I will definitely not need to promote myself too much. But will it also make me better at work? Not necessarily. Excessive expectations may become a pressure.'
He had another concern, too.
"And will it make me too busy and prevent me from working more attentively?' he pondered. "I hope to keep the normalcy and the freedom, as well as calmness.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab Times
a day ago
- Arab Times
Nagasaki Cathedral blesses new bell to replace one lost in 1945 atomic bombing
TOKYO, July 19, (AP): A Nagasaki cathedral has blessed the final piece to complete its restoration nearly 80 years after being destroyed by the second U.S. atomic bomb dropped on Japan: a reproduction of its lost bell restored by a group of Americans. The new bell was blessed and named the "St. Kateri Bell of Hope,' by Peter Michiaki Nakamura, archbishop of Nagasaki, at the Urakami Cathedral in a ceremony Thursday attended by more than 100 followers and other participants. The bell is scheduled to be hung inside the cathedral, filling the empty bell tower for the first time, on Aug. 9, the anniversary of the bombing. The U.S. bomb that was dropped Aug. 9, 1945, fell near the cathedral, killing two priests and 24 followers inside among the more than 70,000 dead in the city. Japan surrendered, ending World War II days later. The bombing of Nagasaki destroyed the cathedral building and the smaller of its two bells. The building was restored earlier, but without the smaller bell. The restoration project was led by James Nolan Jr., who was inspired after hearing about the lost bell when he met a local Catholic follower during his 2023 visit to Nagasaki. Nolan lectured about the atomic bombing in the southern city and its history about Catholic converts who went deep underground during centuries of violent persecution in Japan's feudal era, to raise funds for the bell restoration. "I think it's beautiful and the bell itself is more beautiful than I ever imagined,' Nolan, who was at the blessing ceremony, said after he test-rang the bell. He said he hoped the bell "will be a symbol of unity and that will bear the fruits of fostering hope and peace in a world where there is division and war and hurt." Kojiro Moriuchi, the follower who told Nolan about the bell, prayed and gently touched it. "I'm so grateful,' he said. "I hope Urakami Cathederal will be a place for peace-loving people from around the world to gather.' A sociology professor at Williams College in Massachusetts, Nolan is the grandson of a doctor who was in the Manhattan Project - the secret effort to build the bombs - and who was on a survey team that visited Hiroshima and Nagasaki shortly after the bombings. Nolan wrote the book "Atomic Doctors,' about the moral dilemmas faced by medical doctors who took part in the Manhattan Project, based on materials his grandfather left behind.


Arab Times
a day ago
- Arab Times
Tanker truck crashes, spills fuel into a creek on Washington's Olympic Peninsula
WASHINGTON, July 19, (AP): A tanker truck crashed into a creek on Washington's Olympic Peninsula on Friday, spilling fuel into a tributary of a river where salmon runs were recently restored after a decades-long fight to remove its dams. A spokesperson for Gov. Bob Ferguson's office said the petroleum spill in Indian Creek was the result of an accident on US 101. It was not immediately clear what caused it. The truck is capable of holding 6,000 gallons of diesel and 4,000 gallons of gasoline, although the exact amount that had entered the river was not known, according to the governor's office. "The truck is actively leaking and crews are working to contain the spill,' the governor's office statement Friday evening said. Photos shared by the Washington State Department of Transportation on Facebook show the tanker truck upside down in the creek, while emergency vehicles surround the scene. "This spill is nothing short of heartbreaking for local tribes and other Washingtonians who rely on clean, healthy rivers and streams for their food and livelihoods,' Ferguson said in a statement. He said he is closely monitoring the situation, including its effect on salmon, and plans to visit within the next few days. Two dams on the Elwha River, which flows out of Olympic National Park into the Strait of Juan de Fuca, were removed more than a decade ago after a long fought battle by the the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe. Removing the dams, which were constructed in the early 1900s, opened about 70 miles (113 kilometers) of habitat for salmon and steelhead. Biologists have said it will take at least a generation for the river to recover, but within months of the dams being taken down, salmon already started recolonizing sections of the waterway long closed off to them. The Elwha River is also the main potable water source for Port Angeles. The city announced Friday afternoon that it was temporarily shutting down its water treatment processing operations and asked residents and businesses to limit their use of water. "The City's reservoirs currently have sufficient water supply for the next 18 to 24 hours without interruption to normal service,' the city's statement said. The spill and collision closed part of U.S. 101 on Friday, according to the Washington State Department of Transportation. It said it couldn't give an estimate on when it would reopen. "We expect this to be an extended closure,' the department wrote in a post on Facebook.


Arab Times
4 days ago
- Arab Times
Meet the rats sniffing out landmines in Cambodia
SIEM REAP, Cambodia, July 16, (AP): Rats may send some squealing, but in Cambodia, teams of the not-so-little critters have become indispensable in helping specialists detect land mines that have killed and maimed thousands in the Southeast Asian country. The African giant pouched rats, which can grow up to 45 centimeters (around 18 inches) and weigh up to 1.5 kilograms (more than 3 pounds), are on the front line, making their way nimbly across fields to signal to their handlers when they get a whiff of TNT, used in most land mines and explosive ordnance. "While working with these rats, I have always found mines and they have never skipped a single one,' said Mott Sreymom, a rat handler at APOPO, a humanitarian demining group that trains and deploys rodent detection teams across the world. "I really trust these mine detection rats," Mott told The Associated Press while on her lunch break after working on a land mine field in the province of Siem Reap. After three decades of conflict in the previous century, remnants of war littered approximately 4,500 square kilometers (about 1,737 square miles) of Cambodian land, according to a survey by the Cambodian Mine Action and Victim Assistance Authority (CMAA) in 2004. This affected all 25 Cambodian provinces and nearly half of the country's 14,000 villages. As of 2018, CMAA reported 1,970 square kilometers (760 square miles) remain uncleared. The rats have a keen sense of smell, making them a favorite at APOPO, which also employs landmine-detecting dog teams. "Dogs and rats are better compared to other animals because they are trainable,' said Alberto Zacarias, a field supervisor of APOPO's technical survey dog teams, adding that they are also friendly and easily learn commands. Since demining officially began in Cambodia in 1992, more than 1.1 million mines have been cleared, as well as approximately 2.9 million other explosive remnants of war, according to a 2022 government demining progress report. And the African giant pouched rats are doing their part. "We work with them almost daily, so we get closer,' Mott said. "They are very friendly and they don't move around and get scared. They are like family.'