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Japanese architecture firm From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nikken Sekkei Ltd. (日建設計) is an architectural, planning and engineering firm from Japan, with headquarters in Chiyoda, Tokyo. Today (2019), Nikken Sekkei ranks as the second largest architectural practice in the world.[3]
Native name | 株式会社日建設計 |
---|---|
Company type | Private |
Industry | Architecture Engineering Planning/Urbanism |
Founded | 1900 |
Headquarters | , Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Tadao Kamei (president and CEO) |
Services |
|
Number of employees | 2,685 (as of April 1, 2019) |
Website | www |
Footnotes / references [1][2] |
As of 2019, the group employs 2,685 workers and has completed more than 25,000 projects in more than 50 countries. Nikken Sekkei's International offices are in Tokyo, Shanghai, Beijing, Dalian, Seoul, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Singapore, Dubai, Riyadh, Moscow, Barcelona; Bangkok; while the Japanese branches are located in: Osaka, Nagoya, Fukuoka, and Sendai. The newest office opened in 2023 in Dubai, UAE.[2]
Nikken Sekkei dates its origins back to 1900, as an offspring of Sumitomo Corporation.[4] Under the name of Sumitomo Temporary Architecture Department, it was founded in response to Sumitomo's need to establish a headquarters. The company established its independence from the Sumitomo Corporation in the 1950s under the name Nikken Sekkei Komu Co. Ltd.[5] As a private practice since 1970, Nikken Sekkei has maintained its In-house Shareholder Corporate System and is partly owned by its employees.[2]
Nikken Sekkei together with Nikken Sekkei Research Institute (NSRI), Hokkaido Nikken Sekkei, Nikken Sekkei Civil Engineering (NSC), Nikken Housing System Ltd (NHS), Nikken Space Design (NSD), Nikken Sekkei Construction Management (NCM) forms the Nikken Group.
In 2018, Nikken Sekkei was shortlisted for the European Cultural Centre Architecture Award.[6]
Tadao Kamei has been CEO and President of Nikken Sekkei since 2015.
Among other notable projects, Nikken Sekkei was the primary architectural firm for the Tokyo Skytree, currently (2019) the tallest self-supporting broadcasting tower in the world, and second tallest man made structure of any kind.
In 2016 it has been selected by FC Barcelona for the redesign of the largest stadium in Europe.[8] and in 2018, Sumitomo Forestry, in collaboration with Nikken Sekkei, announced the study of W350 Project, the future tallest timber tower (350 meters) and Japan tallest building.[9]
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