advertisement

Minoru Yamasaki

Minoru Yamasaki

Architect

December 1, 1912


Minoru Yamasaki Biography, Life, Interesting Facts

Minoru Yamasaki was an American architect, best-known for his work on the World Trade Center.

Early Life

Minoru Yamasaki was born in the city of Seattle, Washington, on December 1, 1912. His parents’ names were John and Hana. They were Japanese. He spent his childhood in the city of Auburn.

advertisement
advertisement



Education

Minoru Yamasaki studied at the Garfield Senior High School. In 1934, he got a degree in architecture from the University of Washington.  He then earned a master’s degree from New York University. Decades later, he got a Doctorate in the Fine Arts from Bates College in Maine.

advertisement
advertisement

Career

Minoru Yamasaki began his career in New York City. He worked at the architectural firm of Shreve, Lamb & Harmon. He moved to the city of Detroit, Michigan, in 1945. There, he worked at the architectural firm of Smith, Hinchman & Grylls. In 1949, he started his firm, called Yamasaki & Associates.

Yamasaki’s first more prominent work was the Pruitt Igoe public housing project in Saint Louis, Missouri. His first internationally famous project was the Pacific Science Center in Seattle. He designed two international airports – one in Saint Louis, and the other in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. He designed two synagogues – one in Glencoe, Illinois, and the other in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.

He created parts of the campuses of Carleton College in Minnesota and the University of Regina in Canada. He worked on the Federal Reserve Bank in Richmond, Virginia, and the Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D. C. He designed the headquarters for the Reynolds Metals Company.

Minoru Yamasaki's most famous project was the World Trade Center. He finished the design in 1964, and the construction began in 1966. He created a unique elevator system, called sky lobby. The Twin Towers of the World Trade Center became one of the most famous buildings in New York City.

advertisement
advertisement

Awards

Minoru Yamasaki was chosen as one of the Fellows of the American Institute of Architects. He won the Institute’s First Honor Award three times. He reached the cover story of TIME magazine in 1963.

advertisement
advertisement

Personal Life

In 1941, Minoru Yamasakimarried a pianist named Teruko Hirashiki. They had three kids, named Taro, Kim, and Carol. They got a divorce in 1961. After that, he got into two more marriages that ultimately failed. In 1969, he remarried his first wife.

advertisement
advertisement

Death

Minoru Yamasaki suffered from stomach cancer. He passed away on February 6, 1986, in Detroit. He was 73 years old. He did not live to see the destruction of the Twin Towers during the terrorist attacks on September 11th, 2001.


advertisement