Asahi Beer Hall

The Asahi Beer Hall (a.k.a. Super Dry Hall, or Flamme d'Or) is one of the buildings of the Asahi Breweries headquarters located on the east bank of the Sumida River in Sumida, Tokyo, Japan. It was designed by French designer Philippe Starck and was completed in 1989. It is considered one of Tokyo's most recognizable modern structures.[1]

Asahi Breweries headquarters building with the "Asahi Flame" by Philippe Starck (1989)

The shape of the building is that of a beer glass, designed to complement the neighboring golden beer mug-shaped building housing the Asahi Breweries offices.

The Asahi Flame (Flamme d'Or)

It is noted for the Asahi Flame, an enormous golden structure at the top, said to represent both the 'burning heart of Asahi beer' and a frothy head.[2] The 360-tonne golden flame was made by shipbuilders using submarine-construction techniques. It is completely empty.

The Asahi Flame is sometimes colloquially referred to as "the golden turd" (kin no unko, 金のうんこ) and the Asahi Beer Hall itself as "poo building" (unko-biru, うんこビル).[3][4]

Access

The building is a 3 minute-walk from Asakusa Station, on the opposite side of the Sumida River.

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gollark: Also, I mean in general.
gollark: Which is lots of people, but it's a political ideology, ish.
gollark: > But even if it's technically a sexual orientation, it should not be associated with LGBT+Sure!> WHAT POLITICAL IDEOLOGY BENEFITS FROM THIS... anti-pedophile types?
gollark: You shouldn't have definitions of things be "whatever is politically convenient for me" and shouldn't just do a strategic equivocation/motte-and-bailey thing by switching them out constantly.

References

  1. Bolstad, Max (1998). "Asahi Beer Hall". Bento.com Architecture Review.
  2. "Ellipsis Guide:Tokyo:Super Dry Hall". Ellipsis. Archived from the original on 12 February 1998.
  3. Graham M Thomas (30 December 2014). SAGUS Vol 32: Tokyo: A new look at Tokyo, the world's greatest megatropolis. Graham M Thomas. p. 85. GGKEY:LR4E1439GJS.
  4. Kristy Chambers (1 October 2014). It's Not You, Geography, It's Me. University of Queensland Press. ISBN 978-0-7022-5303-4.
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