Hideo Sasaki Biography
Hideo Sasaki was born in Reedley, California, on November 25, 1919. A farmer's son, he graduated from Reedley Junior College in 1939. He studied business administration with a minor in art at the University of California, Los Angeles; but after hearing about the field of city planning, Sasaki transferred to U.C. Berkeley where planning was taught in the landscape architecture department.
Sasaki's studies in California ended abruptly with the outbreak of World War II. After a brief time in an internment camp for Japanese Americans, he worked in the sugar beet fields of Colorado, and later in a photographer鈥檚 darkroom in Chicago. He received a B.F.A. in landscape architecture in 1946 from the University of Illinois, where he studied under Stanley White and Karl B. Lohmann, and in 1948 completed his M.L.A. at Harvard University.
At Harvard's Graduate School of Design (GSD) while Walter Gropius was dean, Sasaki came into contact with Bauhaus ideals of teamwork and mingled freely with architects and engineers. After graduation, he worked in the New York and Chicago offices of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), and taught at the University of Illinois and Harvard. Sasaki also did research on housing and urban renewal in and around Chicago with planner Reginald Isaacs and students at the University of Illinois.
By the end of 1953, Sasaki was teaching at Harvard and practicing in Watertown, Massachusetts. At the GSD, the new dean, Josep Llu铆s Sert, and the new planning department chairman, Reginald Isaacs, shared Sasaki's commitment to collaboration, blurring the lines between professions and departments.
As head of a large planning and design firm and as chairman of Harvard's department of landscape architecture from 1958 to 1968, Sasaki utilized a wide range of talents, regularly giving credit to others. Projects showing Sasaki鈥檚 propensity for collaboration included Sea Pines Plantation on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, for the developer Charles Fraser in 1958; Upjohn Corporation World Headquarters in Kalamazoo, Michigan, with SOM from 1957 to 1961; Deere and Company Headquarters with architects Eero Saarinen and Associates in 1963; and projects in New England and elsewhere with architects Pietro Belluschi, J.L. Sert, I.M. Pei, Paul Rudolph, and Edward Larrabee Barnes - leading figures in the Modernist movement.
It was a unique moment in time, a "coalescing of different forces and ideas," Sasaki recalled. There was pent-up demand for revitalization and new construction after World War II. The environmental movement was gaining strength. New tools, such as aerial photo interpretation, computer graphics, and computer modeling, were being developed. A focus on research and regional planning opened up new opportunities for collaboration. As Dean Sert noted at Harvard's first annual urban design conference in April 1956, the era of individual, isolated work was over. It was a new era of synthesis.
At Harvard's department of landscape architecture this shift was evident in the emphasis on team teaching and group projects. The sequence of studies was divided into eight-week quarters, taught by a small core faculty and many guests, including specialists from other schools and colleagues from Sasaki's practice. The department's limited funds induced Sasaki to keep a flow of expertise moving from his office to the school and back again. It was a remarkable symbiosis, recalled Professor Charles W. Harris, Sasaki's successor at Harvard.
Such was Sasaki鈥檚 legacy, an increasingly comprehensive approach to planning and design, such that many skills and talents - artistic, intellectual, technical - were given free range, while none alone was dominant. Within his firm, two ideals are still upheld: Collaboration among people from different fields; and integration of land, buildings, and the larger environment. Another of Sasaki鈥檚 ideals was the oasis 鈥揳 designed landscape where the human spirit could be refreshed, especially in the city. Examples include Greenacre Park in New York; Constitution Plaza in Hartford, Connecticut; housing developments in Chicago and New York; and Christopher Columbus Park in Boston. 鈥淎s the world becomes more crowded and resources limited,鈥 he wrote in 1989, 鈥渨e must treasure the oases we find and create new ones, no matter how small, with love and care.鈥
Sasaki's office went through several configurations and spin-offs, including Sasaki, Walker and Associates; Sasaki, Dawson, DeMay Associates; the SWA Group, and Sasaki Associates. The office's planned and built work garnered numerous awards. He was a member of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts in Washington, D.C., from 1961 to 1971. He was often a juror for competitions, including those for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in 1981 and the Astronauts鈥 Memorial in 1988.
A Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects, Sasaki received the ASLA Medal in 1971 and the Allied Professions Medal of the American Institute of Architects in 1973. He was awarded honorary doctorates from the University of Illinois, the University of Colorado, and Ohio State University. In the spring of 2000, the Harvard GSD awarded him the Centennial Medal in honor of his extraordinary achievement in landscape architecture. He died on August 30, 2000. Tributes after his passing included accolades from a former student, "In addition to being a towering giant in his profession, he was always gentle as a human being."