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The Paper Dome (Chinese: 桃米紙教堂; pinyin: Táomǐ Zhǐ Jiàotáng) is a temporary church building constructed using paper tubes as structural elements. It was designed on a pro-bono basis by Shigeru Ban, a Japanese architect who is known for his paper tube structures and buildings. This temporary structure was built on September 17, 1995 to serve as a temporary church for Takatori Catholic Church after the Great Hanshin earthquake. The venue was not only limited for use to religious worship, but also used for communal gatherings. When the church community planned to build a permanent building, the structure was donated to Taomi Village in Puli Township, Nantou County, Taiwan, which had suffered the 921 earthquake in 1999. The deconstructed structure was shipped in 2006 to Taiwan, reconstructed th

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Domo de papel (es)
  • Paper Dome (en)
  • 紙教堂 (zh)
rdfs:comment
  • El Domo de papel es una capilla diseñada por el arquitecto japonés Shigeru Ban para dotar de un templo a varios damnificados del Gran terremoto de Hanshin-Awaji de 1995. Inicialmente fue construida en Japón por voluntarios en sólo 5 semanas, sin maquinaria pesada y a bajo costo. Más tarde encontró su hogar permanente en Puli, Condado de Nantou (Taiwán), el epicentro del terremoto de Chichi de 1999.​ (es)
  • The Paper Dome (Chinese: 桃米紙教堂; pinyin: Táomǐ Zhǐ Jiàotáng) is a temporary church building constructed using paper tubes as structural elements. It was designed on a pro-bono basis by Shigeru Ban, a Japanese architect who is known for his paper tube structures and buildings. This temporary structure was built on September 17, 1995 to serve as a temporary church for Takatori Catholic Church after the Great Hanshin earthquake. The venue was not only limited for use to religious worship, but also used for communal gatherings. When the church community planned to build a permanent building, the structure was donated to Taomi Village in Puli Township, Nantou County, Taiwan, which had suffered the 921 earthquake in 1999. The deconstructed structure was shipped in 2006 to Taiwan, reconstructed th (en)
foaf:name
  • Paper Dome (en)
name
  • Paper Dome (en)
geo:lat
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/1214966884.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Paper_dome_night.jpg
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  • 桃米紙教堂 (en)
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  • 桃米紙教堂 (en)
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  • zh (en)
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  • Táomǐ Zhǐ Jiàotáng (en)
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  • 23.9414 120.9271
has abstract
  • El Domo de papel es una capilla diseñada por el arquitecto japonés Shigeru Ban para dotar de un templo a varios damnificados del Gran terremoto de Hanshin-Awaji de 1995. Inicialmente fue construida en Japón por voluntarios en sólo 5 semanas, sin maquinaria pesada y a bajo costo. Más tarde encontró su hogar permanente en Puli, Condado de Nantou (Taiwán), el epicentro del terremoto de Chichi de 1999.​ (es)
  • The Paper Dome (Chinese: 桃米紙教堂; pinyin: Táomǐ Zhǐ Jiàotáng) is a temporary church building constructed using paper tubes as structural elements. It was designed on a pro-bono basis by Shigeru Ban, a Japanese architect who is known for his paper tube structures and buildings. This temporary structure was built on September 17, 1995 to serve as a temporary church for Takatori Catholic Church after the Great Hanshin earthquake. The venue was not only limited for use to religious worship, but also used for communal gatherings. When the church community planned to build a permanent building, the structure was donated to Taomi Village in Puli Township, Nantou County, Taiwan, which had suffered the 921 earthquake in 1999. The deconstructed structure was shipped in 2006 to Taiwan, reconstructed there and is now a tourist attraction. (en)
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  • POINT(120.92710113525 23.941400527954)
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