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Yasuda Auditorium

Yasuda Auditorium
Zenjiro Yasuda (a founder of the Yasuda zaibatsu) was concerned that the University did not have a binden (temporary resting quarters for the Emperor). Thus, Yasuda made donations to the University to construct such a place, and Yasuda Auditorium was completed in 1925. Although architect Yoshikazu Uchida appeared to have received inspiration for his design from the gate tower on Cambridge University¡¯s campus, the dynamic design of the Auditorium is quite unique. Yasuda Auditorium became a befitting new symbol of the University of Tokyo, as the University was at that time striving to transform into a modern research university. Structures on campus tiled in reddish brown-colored bricks, such as this building, the Faculty of Science Building 1 and the South Clinical Research Building, can be said to strongly represent structures existing during the Taisho period around the time of the Great Kanto Earthquake (1923). The Auditorium¡¯s renovation, completed after the 1968 University of °®¶¹´«Ã½Protests (Todai funs¨­), was also funded by the Yasuda zaibatsu.

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