When I was a child, I spent time not only in various parts of Japan but also in Jakarta, Indonesia due to my father's work.
In a well-ventilated house with a courtyard and a pond, I would paint, do crafts, or run to the top of the roof to fly a kite and watch the bright red sunset beyond the mosque while listening to adhan. At that time, I didn't know that the buildings where I spent memorable times, such as relaxing meals with my family and vacationing at seaside hotels, were designed by architects.
During his high school days, he spent most of his time living in the dormitory and playing rugby, making it to near the top of the national tournament, the pinnacle of high school rugby, but when it came time to think about his future, he couldn't think of anything other than becoming an architect instead of a rugby player.
When I was a student at the Department of Architecture at Musashino Art University, I not only worked on university projects, but also interned at numerous architectural firms such as Arata Isozaki, Riken Yamamoto, and Organization Office, while on vacation I carried a backpack and traveled to India and Sri Lanka. I voraciously enjoyed the various landscapes, cultures, and lifestyles of Mexico, Spain, and other countries. The background to many of these experiences was that architecture is everywhere, indispensable to people, and good architecture brings excitement.
I am fascinated not only by historical buildings and buildings designed by famous architects, but also by anonymous buildings where people are dynamic and make up the landscape, and I wanted to design such a building myself someday.
From my experience as a student, I was attracted to the idea of quickly acquiring practical design skills and actually designing buildings one by one, so I chose this career path.