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  1. 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.

  2. 30 de jun. de 2019 · Tsumaki Yorinaka (1859–1916), a protege of British architect Josiah Conder (1852–1920), is credited with its design. Things to see on the bridge: Zero kilometer marker: since the Gokaidō kickstarted Japan’s highway system in 1604, Nihombashi was the place where they all started.

  3. His design of the Nippon Kangyō Bank (1899; no longer extant) and Okada Shinichirō’s (1883–1932) Kabuki Theatre (1924) in Tokyo are representative of attempts to combine the grand scale of Western buildings with such traditional elements of Japanese architecture as tiled hip-gabled….

  4. Tsumaki Yorinaka, who is said to be one of the key persons related to the problem of the construction of the Diet Building and the biggest rival of TATSUNO Kingo, entered the Imperial College of Engineering in 1878 (Meiji 11) and studied under Conder; however, he quit college in 1882 (Meiji 15).

  5. 6 de jun. de 2024 · El puente de piedra actual es uno de los dos únicos puentes originales del periodo Meiji que quedan en Tokio, siendo el otro el puente Tokiwa, en la cercana Otemachi. En este caso, el puente Nihonbashi fue diseñado por Tsumaki Yorinaka (1859-1916), mide 49 metros de largo y tiene dos arcos de piedra.

  6. 24 de abr. de 2013 · Here Ikeda gives the name as Tsumaki Yoritomo, but it is more likely to be Tsumaki Yorinaka.

  7. Planned by a Japanese architect and a government official, Tsumaki Yorinaka, the current Building No. 2 was constructed in 1911, and the current Building No. 1 was erected in 1913. Both were to be used as customs houses.