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Visit Wright’s imperial Hotel

it’s an interesting story how I learned the original imperial hotel in Tokyo which was taken down in the 60s was replaced with a giant hotel structure more fitting the economic potential of the area. As some of you know this building was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and that is why it was so cherished and rebuilt at Meiji Mura (Meiji era Village).

Pete Muir and his wife Marjorie we’re close family friends often coming over for bridge and a dinner which gave us kids a chance to have some wine. Pete was the grandson of John Muir who you know as the great advocate of the Yosemite national park and many other things. He and Marge planned to visit Tokyo and I was going to take them around to interesting places I found. They had booked the imperial hotel and we’re surprised when they got there it was not the imperial hotel they remembered maybe from the 1950s or early 1960s. So I checked into the history and found that they were rebuilding the original hotel brick by brick near Nagoya at Meiji Mura. This was the first I heard of this place out in the middle of nowhere but my next post will be about the other buildings in this beautiful park which I highly recommend visiting if you’re interested in Japanese history, culture and the period between 1870 and 1925. if they wanted to again see the imperial hotel they remembered they could visit Meiji Mura which they decided to do.

https://www.imperialhotel.co.jp/en/tokyo/special/wright-building

The surrounding area
The front of the hotel
The reception desk
Most everything in the hotel was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright all the way down to the plates
The coffee shop. You can see how open but also intimate feeling he imagined for this area
Coffee shop tables and chairs
I see a lot of Inca and maybe Aztec influences in some of his designs
The expensive lobby
a dining area
a volunteer gentleman playing some soothing tune on his single string Chinese violin/banjo
Francis Little House “Northome” , Minnesota. Windows from some other of his creations
The light be from another angle. You can see how we departmentalize the different areas but at the same time presents an open architecture
After visiting I had a very delicious baked eel on rice luncheon (unagi don)
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