Imperial College of Engineering, Cornell University
Occupation
Architect
Design
Nihonbashi Bridge (1911)
Tsumaki Yorinaka (妻木 頼黄, February 22, 1859—October 10, 1916) was a Japanese architect and Head of the Japanese Ministry of Finance building section in the later Meiji period.
Credited with the design of many significant Meiji era structures in Japan, notably the Nihonbashi Bridge.
TsumakiYorinaka (妻木 頼黄, February 22, 1859—October 10, 1916) was a Japanese architect and Head of the Japanese Ministry of Finance building section in...
wooden bridge was completed in 1603. The current bridge, designed by TsumakiYorinaka and constructed of stone on a steel frame, dates from 1911. The district...
along its route; foremost being the Nihonbashi Bridge designed by TsumakiYorinaka in 1911. de Graaf, Rutger (2008). Urban Water in Japan. London: Taylor...
later. Planned by a Japanese architect and a government official, TsumakiYorinaka, the current Building No. 2 was constructed in 1911, and the current...
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, completed in 1937 Bank of China Dalian branch, designed by TsumakiYorinaka in 1909 Kyoto National Museum in Kyōto, Tōkuma Katayama [ja], built...
studied under Tatsuno Kingo and so on. He was the right-hand person of TsumakiYorinaka, called one of "Three Great Masters" in Meiji Era together with Tatsuno...
called Germania Maschinenfabrik and then implemented by architect TsumakiYorinaka, who worked on other industrial projects including the Yokohama Red...
Former head office building in Yokohama, designed by architect TsumakiYorinaka and completed in 1904; since 1967 seat of the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum...
Branch of Yokohama Specie Bank (in Japanese: 横浜正金銀行), designed by TsumakiYorinaka (in Japanese: 妻木頼黄) and his disciple, Satoshi Ōta (Japanese: 太田毅)....