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Update from Kesennuma, Japan: Students Complete Fish Arch and Recovery Efforts Are Under Way

09/22/2011
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    In July, we wrote about a great project from <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/student-project">students</a> at Keio University who designed a <a href="http://inhabitat.com/japanese-students-build-a-pavilion-from-thousands-of-fish-to-support-tsunami-reconstruction-efforts/">modular fish arch</a> to be assembled with the help of tsunami victims in the town of Kesennuma. The entire effort was in support of the victims and part of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bon_Festival" target="_blank">O-Bon festival</a> to enliven people's spirits. A group of school children helped the student design team assemble the fish arch and hang <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/led-lights">LED lights</a> on it in memory of those they lost with great hopes toward the recovery and reconstruction process. After the festival, the arch was disassembled and each resident was given a fish to take home in remembrance. Read on to hear more about this <a href="http://inhabitat.com/japanese-students-build-a-pavilion-from-thousands-of-fish-to-support-tsunami-reconstruction-efforts/">heartfelt project</a> and get an on-the-ground update about recovery efforts going on in Kesunnuma.
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    As you may recall, the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/fish-feast-student-makes-swimming-goggles-glasses-and-more-out-of-100-fish-scales/">Fish</a> Arch was led by a group of students taking Yasushi Ikeda’s lab at Keio University.
    2
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    The group was asked to contribute to the Obon Festival with an installation.
    3
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    Since there has been construction moratorium up until now in September, there was no way the students could build anything permanent.
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    So they decided a temporary installation that the residents and children could take part in might be fun and uplifting and serve as a symbolic act.
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    A lumber yard in Kesennuma donated the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/edge-condition-scrap-wood-pavilion-is-a-dizzying-jenga-like-sculpture/">wood scraps</a> for the project, which were then laser cut into the fish shapes.
    6
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    Visitors, staff and students from Keio University signed the fish with messages of support to the victims.
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    The <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/student-project">student group</a> then took the modular fishes down to Kesennuma for the Obon Festival at the end of August.
    8
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    The Obon festival is a national holiday devoted to remembering the dead and is usually a positive time where families return to their homes and celebrate being together.
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    This year was a little different because of the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/tsunami">tsunami</a> as many did not have homes to return to and around 1,000 people perished and 400 are still missing.
    10
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    Bill Galloway, a research lecturer at Keio University who assisted with the student project, told us "Preparations for the festival were not so easy and really there is always the question of whether it is appropriate to return to a more normal life already or not. In the end the community decided to go ahead with the festival but to keep it a bit low key."
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    This year the festival was held on the school grounds where temporary shelters were set up and the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/japanese-students-build-a-pavilion-from-thousands-of-fish-to-support-tsunami-reconstruction-efforts/">Fish Arch</a> was assembled as part of the celebrations.
    12
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    About 60 6th-graders from the elementary school participated by building the arch with the help of the 13-member student group.
    13
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    They built 3 arches in a few hours and then the younger kids helped to hang LED lamps on it so that it would be visible at night during the festival itself. Afterwards, the arches were deconstructed and the signed fish were given out to the residents.
    14
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    Galloway, who was on hand during the installation, admitted, "I was not sure how [it] would be received, but in fact the community really embraced the project and they all wanted to have the signed fish to take home. It is a good thing to be reminded that in times of disaster it is not only the practical and the needful, but also the symbolic and the heartfelt that are part of the recovery process."
    15
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    As to the recovery efforts in Kesenuma, Galloway sends an update. Roads are now built up and passable in Kesennuma, but the cleanup is still a long way from complete.
    16
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/temporary-shelters">Temporary shelters</a> have been set up on the grounds of the elementary school where the festival took place.
    17
  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    The waterfront has been remarkably cleaned up and is easily navigated by the temporary resurfaced roads, but you can also see that a lot of work remains.
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  • Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University
    [gallery_extend]....<br><br><a href='https://inhabitat.com/update-from-kesennuma-recovery-efforts-and-a-completed-fish-arch/'>READ ARTICLE</a>
    19
1/19

Kesennuma Fish Arch Update-Keio University

In July, we wrote about a great project from students at Keio University who designed a modular fish arch to be assembled with the help of tsunami victims in the town of Kesennuma. The entire effort was in support of the victims and part of the O-Bon festival to enliven people's spirits. A group of school children helped the student design team assemble the fish arch and hang LED lights on it in memory of those they lost with great hopes toward the recovery and reconstruction process. After the festival, the arch was disassembled and each resident was given a fish to take home in remembrance. Read on to hear more about this heartfelt project and get an on-the-ground update about recovery efforts going on in Kesunnuma.

READ MORE...
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Categories:  Architecture, News
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