Satoru Nishita Biography
Satoru 鈥淪at鈥 Nishita鈥檚 numerous award-winning projects as a landscape architect highlight his environmental ethic, reveal his sensitivity to site and context, and show his deft handling of design details. Born July 4, 1927, in Castroville, California, Nishita was the oldest son and second of Kimiko and Shuichi Nishita鈥檚 five children. He grew up in farming communities in San Benito and Monterey Counties, living in Castroville and San Juan Bautista, California. Gardening and working with plants ran in his family. Nishita鈥檚 grandfather and father were locally renown for their beautiful bonsai, and his Japanese father ran the family鈥檚 successful garlic farm and gardened for the local Franciscan monks.
During the Second World War the Nishita family was relocated into Poston, Arizona, Camp 1, Block 17. This internment camp, known as the Colorado River War Relocation Project, included many American born Japanese from California cities. After the family's release from the camp, Nishita enlisted in the United States Armed Services as a private, having graduated from Poston High School. On March 30, 1946 he arrived at Camp Beale in Marysville, California, where he served in the 6th Army Medical Corps, before being discharged in 1947.
Nishita entered the University of California Berkeley under the G.I. Bill, commenting years later, 鈥淎fter World War II, the men attending the University were serious. We wanted to get back into the mainstream of society, and there was very little fooling around.鈥 He graduated in 1951 with a Bachelor of Science in Landscape Architecture. At Berkeley, his path of studies drew from his childhood experiences in working landscapes, but he was also 鈥溾 very moved by the words of John Muir, the first president of the Sierra Club,鈥 and by Frederick Law Olmsted鈥檚 urban parks, and particularly Olmsted鈥檚 Stanford campus design. An environmental ethos shaped his future design approach. Nishita recalled the influence of faculty member Leland Vaughn, the head of landscape architecture, and lecturers including Thomas Church and Lawrence Halprin, but he credited Robert Burton Litton, Jr. as the strongest influence during his years at Berkeley. Nishita鈥檚 studies with Litton fostered his passion and talent for drawing and he became an avid sketcher and visual thinker.
While at Berkeley, Nishita also pursued several professional opportunities, and developed close relationships with many of his peers. His work experiences while a student included a stint with Ariaki 鈥淎ri鈥 Inouye, and a pivotal year in his teacher Robert Royston鈥檚 firm, Eckbo, Royston & Williams. Close classmates at Berkeley included George Homsey (in architecture), Asa Hanamoto, Kay Kajiwara, Jean Walton, and Don Carter, with whom Nishita shared a deep, lifelong friendship and several design partnerships.
On November 11, 1951 Nishita married Yuriko Kumamoto, also from Berkeley. Between 1953 and 1964 they had five daughters. They raised their family at a home on 5 陆 acres that they owned in Richmond, California. Nishita noted, the 鈥減revious owner was a horticulturalist 鈥 [it] had beautiful oak trees and a creek. Everything was kept natural [although I] planted some fruit trees.鈥 Feeding Nishita鈥檚 love of the natural environment and California landscapes, the family enjoyed annual summer vacations in the Sierra Nevada, where Nishita immersed himself 鈥渟tudying and sketching the [landscapes and] moving water in the Sierras." He contributed sketches to the book Visual Notes for Architects and Designers, stating as his position: "Sketches 鈥榬eflect鈥 and record initial 鈥榠mpressions鈥 and 鈥榯houghts鈥 about the existing site, the environment and the regional character. They provide a clue to the importance of the existing major elements, character, and natural surroundings (i.e., vegetation, land forms, hydrology, and urban forms, etc.) which reflect the setting and the context for the proposed project. They also unveil critical problems, issues, constraints, and opportunities through the process of visual observation, graphic notes, and analyses. I find them a valuable tool to communicate thoughts and ideas to other members of the team and to stimulate other ideas and discussion by means of feedback from them."
This practice was evident throughout his career. In 1951 he joined Don Carter, Jean Walton, and Richard Vignolo as one of the earliest employees of the landscape architect and urban planner Lawrence Halprin. Nishita, a 鈥渉ighly inventive and probing designer,鈥 was a valuable member of the design team, becoming a principal in 1964. George McLaughlin, who apprenticed in the office, wrote that Nishita, Carter and Vignolo, the three principals, 鈥渨ere great landscape architects and great teachers and great people involved with all of the jobs in the office鈥hey were great designers, each with their own style. Sat had a sort of abstract romantic approach to design鈥at and Don were among most decent individuals with whom I have ever worked鈥pen and helpful with all the staff鈥hey were great mentors and great guys.鈥
Nishita was the partner-in-charge and lead landscape architect for many notable projects in the Halprin office including: Nicolett Mall in Minneapolis (1968); the award winning open space sequence in Portland, Oregon (1965-78), including Forecourt Fountain, Pettigrove Park, and Lovejoy Fountain and Plaza; Skyline Park in Denver (1973); and Heritage Park in Ft. Worth, Texas (1976). Less well known is Nishita鈥檚 deep involvement on the University of California at Davis鈥 campus (1963-70s), notably the 鈥淟ong Range Development Plan鈥 and numerous site projects. One of Nishita鈥檚 favorite projects, he cites its successful transformation of the agricultural college into a large university setting, friendly to pedestrians and bicycles. In his work for the Bay Area Rapid Transit Authority, he 鈥渆stablished design planning criteria for spaces around the stations; formulated concepts for linear parks along BART track and rights-of-way; developed an integrated system of open spaces and playgrounds along the whole network; and proposed ways and means of meshing BART into the neighborhoods it traversed without adverse effects.鈥 Nishita was also the designer in charge for Riverbank Park in Flint, Michigan, a promenade and fountain project partnered with the Corps of Engineers and city of Flint that he and Don Carter completed in their firm CHNMB Associates, and for which their firm received national acclaim and an ASLA Award of Honor in 1982.
CHNMB Associates is one of two major offices that arose from Halprin鈥檚 office closure in 1976. Founding partners included Carter and Nishita, William Hull and Byron McCulley. Building on their established reputation and experience, the firm emphasized urban design and planning with projects like the 鈥淭ulsa Downtown Workshop Report鈥 (1979) and the 鈥淢arket Street Transportation Study Report鈥 (1982). They accomplished environmental studies such as the 鈥淢aster Plan for the Eastbay Shoreline Report鈥 (1982), and the 鈥淟ighthouse Field State Beach Environmental Design Report鈥 (1982). Nishita worked on the restoration of the 鈥渘atural鈥 Huntingdon Falls in Golden Gate Park (1981). Urban design work included the Portland Transit Mall, which won an AIA Award in 1979, and master planning and site design for Jack London Square on the historically-significant waterfront of Oakland, California (1985). Nishita鈥檚 portfolio also highlights his skill with design details and his sensitivity to creating meaningful places for people. One example is the award winning Alvarado Square (1975) in San Pablo, California, where Nishita pushed for traditionally appropriate fountains in the new City Hall Complex鈥檚 public courtyard, telling the Richmond Independent Gazette, 鈥淭hings move so fast in our society. We need the calmness created by water to allow us to reflect on life.鈥 At Babi Yar Park in Denver, Colorado (1982) Nishita鈥檚 sketches show his attention to site and the conceptual richness of the program.
CHNMB Associates operated until 1985, when it became Nishita & Carter, Inc.; their partnership continued until at least 1989. Their roster of projects includes two major developments in Japan for the Mori Company, Ltd. Ark Hills, an urban development project in the heart of Tokyo, was a large mixed-use development including a major plaza and fountain surrounded by roof gardens, while Gotenyama Gardens Hi-Rise was a luxury development replete with elaborate gardens and fountains.
Nishita retired from practice for health reasons in the early 1990s. His firm evolved, and in 1994 became Carter Tighe Leeming + Kajiwara [CTLK]. Principal Lisa Leeming, a former project designer at CHNMB and Nishita & Carter, observed that Nishita was a talented designer, 鈥渙pen and light and easy 鈥 but very focused.鈥 She added, 鈥淪at never forgot the life events 鈥 birthdays, babies, weddings. He was the guy who bought the cakes, and planned the celebrations.鈥 His warmth and talent drew young people in the profession to him. His career certainly reflects his design talents, but he also made his mark mentoring and training new generations of practitioners whom he imbued with confidence, practical knowledge, site observation skills, and an environmental ethos. Not long before his passing in July of 2013, Nishita provided the following advice to young professionals in the field 鈥淜eep your mind open.鈥
Biblography
Crowe, Norman and Paul Laseau. 鈥淪atoru Nishita, Landscape Architect,鈥 Visual Notes for Architects and Designers (New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1984. Revised edition, Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2012): 106-109.