Takamasa Yoshizaka

Takamasa Yoshizaka (吉阪 隆正, Yoshizaka Takamasa?, February 13, 1917—December 17, 1980), family name also romanized as Yosizaka, was a Japanese architect and former president of the Architectural Institute of Japan and a keen mountaineer.

After graduating from university he worked at Le Corbusier's atelier in Paris for two years working on projects in France and India. After his return to Japan, he collaborated on Le Corbusier's National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo in 1959. He set up his own practice called in Atelier U in 1964.

He proposed a theory of Discontinuous Unity and translated many of Le Corbusier's works from French into Japanese.

Read more about Takamasa Yoshizaka:  Early Life, Life With Le Corbusier, Other Interests, Return To Japan, National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo, Theories: Discontinuous Unity, Legacy, Selected Writings, Selected Projects