Shigeru Ban may be best known for his evocative Curtain Wall House in Tokyoa highlight of the Museum of Modern Art's 1999 Un-Private House exhibitbut few know the range of this Japanese
architect's work. In this first English-language monograph on Ban, 30 built projects reveal his inventiveness and humanitarianism. Ban's primary objectives in his work are the use of low cost
materials and the dissolution of the boundaries between interior and exterior spaces. His paper tube designs, which he first created as emergency housing for victims of Rwanda's civil war, were
later reconfigured for earthquake victims in Kobe and are currently incorporated in Ban's Japanese Pavilion at Hannover Expo 2000. Influenced by the Japanese tradition of linking the home with
the surrounding environment, Ban has created buildings such as Hanegi Forest and Wallsless House that invite nature to coexist with design.