Abstract:
The architecture of the world expositions maintains an historically unique position within the
built environment. Raised specifically for the hosting of these temporary events, the
architecture and design of the exposition grounds have been viewed in this thesis as a means
to present the aspirations of a country. Expositions were also physical manifestations of the
development of new tools, materials, techniques, or aesthetics, ushering in notions of change
and progress. However, exhibition architecture can similarly be interpreted as a vehicle
responding to the changing pressures within a society.
Both historical and contemporary reports locate the world expositions as highly anticipated
for education, communication, enjoyment and even competition. Parallel to this, the
international expositions have existed as an area of well resourced critical research. With
over 150 years of exposition, the historical, political, social, urban and architectural aspects
of these events have been increasingly explored as locations to identify and define avantgarde
and progressive explorations in the moderation of space. In contrast to this, the world
exposition of 1970 exists as a comparatively unexplored area of`study in the West. Expo’70,
located in Osaka, Japan, was poorly received and heavily criticised in Western media
sources. Academics, architects and critics slated the event as bizarre, ridiculous, and
excessive, and one source even noted that Expo’70 had “brought about the end of the world
fairs”. While perhaps some of these comments can be attributed to remoteness, and vastly
unknown sensory experiences that many non-Japanese visitors would be exposed too, a
difficulty in accessing first hand accounts from the Japanese themselves may also account for
a lack of understanding within Western architectural discourse.
However, Expo’70 was, and still is, an important phenomenon in its native land. A search
using Japanese language through any Japanese university library will return a vast collection
of titles covering areas such as social science, politics, technology, and architecture. In
response to these findings, this thesis locates the importance of the event to the Japanese as a
whole. I propose that Expo’70 manifested a number of qualities or conditions that the
Japanese society could locate within their existing aesthetic vocabularies, which are
discussed and displayed in this thesis through both drawing and text. Within this context the
drawn material operates an important strategy as both a mechanism of display and a means
to explore the shifting and transitory spatial qualities that are discussed within the text.
Rather than a turning point, the thesis argues that, Expo’70 existed as a form of vantage for
Japanese society to observe the unfolding changes within their society, both material and
immaterial.