Kiyoshi Mutō Explained

[1] was a Japanese architect and structural engineer. He is considered the "father of the Japanese skyscraper" for his contributions to earthquake engineering.[2]

Earthquake engineering research

Mutō was born in Toride, Ibaraki, Japan.[1] He entered the Department of Architecture at Tokyo Imperial University (now the University of Tokyo) in 1922 and graduated in 1925. He was immediately appointed Lecturer, and obtained a Dr of Engineering degree in 1931. In 1935 he was appointed Professor of Structural Engineering, a post which he held for almost 30 years, developing and teaching the principles of earthquake-resistant design.

Among his best known contributions was the development of a simple but accurate method for routine structural analysis of a moment resisting frame under lateral loading. Known as the "D Method", it replaced tedious, time-consuming calculations with numerical tables, and was widely used for many years throughout the world.[3] It was adopted into the Calculation Standard of the Architectural Institute of Japan in1933.[1]

Work as structural engineer

After retiring from the University of Tokyo in 1963, Muto became executive vice president of Kajima Corporation, a major construction company. He also founded his own company, the Muto Institute of Structural Mechanics, in 1965.[4] At Kajima, he led the team that designed Japan's first high-rise building, the 36-story Kasumigaseki Building. Among his innovations for this building was first energy dissipation system used in Japan, a slit wall system consisting of precast reinforced concrete strips that stabilized the building under strong winds and small earthquakes and absorbed the energy of strong earthquakes.[1]

Works

Mutō was the structural engineer for many of Tokyo's tallest and best-known buildings, including the following.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hiroyuki . Aoyama . Dr Kiyoshi Muto (1903–1989). Structural Engineering International. https://web.archive.org/web/20100706154457/http://www.elearning-iabse.org/board/EminentEng/Kiyoshi%20Muto_1_2005.pdf. 2010-07-06. January 2005.
  2. Web site: ja:武藤清 . http://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/bukko/9884.html . National Research Institute for Cultural Properties . Japanese . 2014-08-22.
  3. Web site: In Memoriam: Thomas Paulay . 2014-08-22 . www.curee.org.
  4. Book: Memorial Tributes . 6 . Dr. Kiyoshi Muto . 1993 . The National Academies Press . National Academy of Engineering . Washington, DC . Penzien . Joseph . Housner . George W.. 10.17226/2231 . 978-0-309-04847-7 .