Shinjuku Ruriko-in Byakurenge-do

Shinjuku_Rurikoin_Byakurengedo_in_Shinjuku,_Tokyo,_Japan.png

Name of Building

Shinjuku Ruriko-in Byakurenge-do

Town or City, Country where the building was originally established

Toyko, Japan

Date the building was designed and/or first built

2014 - Finished construction

Name of Architect, Builder, or Primary Patron Responsible

Arcitect - Kiyoshi Sey Takeyama
Structural Engineer - TIS & PArtners

Culturally Specific Time Period

2010s

Geo-Location

35.68751815426649, 139.69848387915349

Materials

Concrete

Size and/or Scale of Building

Total Area -- 2294.52 sqr meters

Architectural Type

Religious

Formal Style

Futuristic

Building Description

Shinjuku Rurikoin Byakurengedo is a new-age Buddhist temple designed by architect Kiyoshi Sey Takeyama. The structure takes a cubic form with rounded edges and sporadic windows. It does not follow common Buddhist architectural principles. The building instead leans towards a futuristic view of Buddhism while remaining true to the simplicity ingrained in the religion.

Takeyama invents a sense of calm. The white concrete buildings with sporadic windows contrast with the city of uniform structures. It is a religious structure in the middle of a busy city.

Image source

Image 1 - Shinjuku_Rurikoin_Byakurengedo_in_Shinjuku,_Tokyo,_Japan, https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Shinjuku_Rurikoin_Byakurengedo_in_Shinjuku%2C_Tokyo%2C_Japan.png

Creative Commons or other copyright information

Image 1 - Creative Commons

Student First and Last Name

Moanna Dixson

Bibliographic references for the item

https://www.byakurengedo.net/design/
https://hiddenarchitecture.net/shinjuku-ruriko-in-byakurenge-do/
https://www.amorphe.jp/post/142396858109/shinjuku-ruriko-in-byakurenge-do-prize-works#:~:text=in%20Byakurenge%2Ddo-,prize%20works,Apr%2007%2C%202016

Citation

Arcitect - Kiyoshi Sey Takeyama and Structural Engineer - TIS & PArtners, “Shinjuku Ruriko-in Byakurenge-do,” World Architecture, accessed June 28, 2026, https://worldarchitecture.artinterp2.org/items/show/159.

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