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・ Hiroyuki Oze
・ Hiroyuki Saeki
・ Hiroyuki Sakaguchi
・ Hiroyuki Sakai
・ Hiroyuki Sakashita
・ Hiroyuki Sanada
・ Hiroyuki Sasaki
・ Hiroyuki Satō
・ Hiroyuki Sawada
・ Hiroyuki Sawano
・ Hiroyuki Shirai
・ Hiroyuki Shirasaki
・ Hiroyuki Sonoda
・ Hiroyuki Sugimoto
・ Hiroyuki Suzuki
Hiroyuki Suzuki (architectural historian)
・ Hiroyuki Suzuki (figure skater)
・ Hiroyuki Suzuki (yo-yo performer)
・ Hiroyuki Tajima
・ Hiroyuki Takagi
・ Hiroyuki Takahashi
・ Hiroyuki Takahashi (footballer)
・ Hiroyuki Takahashi (game producer)
・ Hiroyuki Takasaki
・ Hiroyuki Takaya
・ Hiroyuki Takeda
・ Hiroyuki Takei
・ Hiroyuki Tamakoshi
・ Hiroyuki Tani
・ Hiroyuki Taniguchi


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Hiroyuki Suzuki (architectural historian) : ウィキペディア英語版
Hiroyuki Suzuki (architectural historian)
Hiroyuki Suzuki (鈴木博之) (May 14, 1945 – February 3, 2014) was a prominent Japanese architectural historian who also established a reputation abroad.
For most of his career Suzuki was Professor of the History of Architecture at the University of Tokyo (1974-2009), and for a period was also Chairman of Tokyo University's Graduate School of Architecture.〔()〕 Later in life he joined the faculty of the School of Cultural and Creative Studies at Aoyama University. He was the author of over a dozen books and countless articles in Japanese, but was best known to English readers as the co-author (with Reyner Banham and Kobayashi Katsuhiro) of ''Contemporary Architecture of Japan, 1958-1984'' (New York: Rizzoli,1985) and ''Shuhei Endo: Paramodern Architecture'' (Phaidon Press, 2006),〔Suzuki Hiroyuki, ed.,''Shuhei Endo: Paramodern Architecture'' (Phaidon Press, 2006)〕 among others.
His Japanese-language scholarship ranged from research on such prominent Meiji-period figures as Josiah Conder〔Hiroyuki Suzuki, "The Business Practices of the Architect Josiah Conder - Focusing on the Takanawa Residence of Iwasaki Yanosuke" in K. Kawanabe et al, ''Josiah Conder: A Victorian Architect in Japan''
(Exhibition Catalogue)Tokyo: East Japan Railway Cultural Foundation, 1997〕 and Itō Chūta (伊東忠太),〔伊東忠太を知っていますか 王国社 2003〕 to many works on contemporary Tokyo, a city to which he was strongly attached. He was among the first architectural historians inside or outside Japan to focus on Meiji and Taisho-period architects and architecture, and argue for continuities between this and the later post-war period when Japanese 'modern' architecture became globally influential.〔Reyner Banham, Suzuki Hiroyuki, and Kobayashi Katsuhiro, ''Contemporary Architecture of Japan, 1958-1984'' (New York: Rizzoli, 1985)〕
Suzuki was a strong proponent of preserving "modern", and not just "traditional" Japanese architecture, and did not shy from wading into development controversies.〔()〕 As chairman of the Japanese branch of the Paris-based conservation group Docomomo International, he oversaw drafting of a list of 135 "modern" Japanese structures worthy of protection.〔()〕 He was a prominent member of the Architectural Consortium that in 2012 received the World Monuments Fund / Knoll Modernism Prize for saving and restoring the Hizuchi Elementary School in Shikoku, designed by Masatsune Matsumura in the late 1950s.() He also consulted on the restoration of Tokyo Station.〔Obituary, ''Mainichi Shinbun'', Feb. 6, 2014〕
For twelve years (1996-2008) Suzuki was one of three members of the Ad Hoc Group of Experts at the Coordinating Committee of Angkor (ICC), advising the Cambodian government on the preservation of Angkor Wat()
Among many honors, Suzuki is a recipient of Japan's Medal of Honor (褒章 hōshō) with Purple Ribbon for his service to scholarship.
==References==



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