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Tokyo (the biggest metropolitan area of the world where around 33 millions people live) surprises with its silent and peaceful corners. Just behind the Nezu Shrine fences (first established in Sendagi around 1,900 years ago and transferred to Nezu in 1706), a visitor dives into a past epoch atmosphere. The sequence of red traditional Japanese gates torii draw a narrow human-scale pathway: a route of purification. The basic symbolic element repeated an infinite number of times offers an architectural experience mixing time and space into one single entity. By @NovozhilovaM
Tokyo (the biggest metropolitan area of the world where around 33 millions people live) surprises with its silent and peaceful corners. Just behind the Nezu Shrine fences (first established in Sendagi around 1,900 years ago and transferred to Nezu in 1706), a visitor dives into a past epoch atmosphere. The sequence of red traditional Japanese gates torii draw a narrow human-scale pathway: a route of purification. The basic symbolic element repeated an infinite number of times offers an architectural experience mixing time and space into one single entity. By @NovozhilovaM