Building exterior lit brightly against night sky, visible from afar.

OMA Transforms Edo-Tokyo Museum into a Living Canvas of Light Without Physical Alterations

User avatar placeholder
Written by Seth Sebastian

2026-06-06

Illuminating Edo-Tokyo’s history through digital innovation

The Edo-Tokyo Museum, celebrated for its pivotal role in preserving Tokyo’s historical narratives since 1993, has undergone a groundbreaking transformation led by OMA. Uniquely, this renovation achieved its brilliance without altering a single wall. Instead, the approach was a scenographic masterpiece that enhances the structure’s existing Metabolist architecture, famously devised by Kiyonori Kikutake.

An architectural symbiosis

The museum’s challenge was clear: how to elevate visitor experience while preserving Kikutake’s iconic elevated structure. OMA, under the guidance of Partner Shohei Shigematsu, adopted a philosophy of addition by subtraction. The renovation accentuated the building’s logic by introducing scenographic interventions that activated underutilized spaces, aligning with the original architectural philosophy without compromising it.

Massive Red Fuji projection covers a museum's structural bay.
Red Fuji scaled to fill an entire structural bay — the collection leaves the gallery and occupies the city.

An immersive entrance experience

Visitors are initially greeted by redesigned entrances on both the west and east sides. These new marquees use contemporary imagery to draw visitors in, featuring LED screens displaying animated content. The designs are a nod to traditional Japanese torii and echo Kikutake’s unbuilt concepts, weaving cultural context into a modern facade. This blending extends the museum’s identity into the urban landscape, engaging the city itself even before you step inside.

Projected kites float above visitors under an open sky illusion.
Kites projected at ceiling scale float above visitors who have no ceiling — the open-air condition makes the illusion complete.

A celestial transformation inside

Inside, the sixth-floor galleries undergo a visionary transformation. The ceilings are turned into digital skies, thanks to sophisticated projection systems. These immersive environments simulate the Edo period, casting lifelike scenes across the surface, removing traditional gallery boundaries and introducing a dynamic atmospheric connection for each exhibit. Objects are staged against projections that reflect their original contexts, enriching the narrative of each piece.

Louver screen fragments projection of Fuji into horizontal light bands.
The louver screen fragments the image into horizontal bands — Fuji dissolves into light before it reaches the artifacts.

Revitalizing urban public space

Perhaps the most ambitious undertaking is the third-floor plaza. The vast space beneath the museum now serves as a vibrant projection canvas, alive with changing skies and art from the museum’s collection, visible even after museum hours. Innovative structures inspired by historical lanterns house the projectors, enhancing this public arena with seating that echoes the design of Edo times. This area becomes a community gift—integrated into city life yet remaining an extension of the museum’s story.

Explore similar urban innovation with Sydney’s steel lookout that redefines public space with architectural integration.

Red gates narrow entrance view towards the museum, creating anticipation.
The red gates compress the approach into a single corridor — the museum announces itself before the building comes into view.

A new era of architectural innovation

Shohei Shigematsu defines the essence of this project: a “non-architectural” endeavor that respects and revitalizes existing architecture through light and projection rather than physical alteration. This approach represents a restrained yet highly creative achievement for OMA, showcasing architectural intelligence that sees buildings and the city as one organism, as Kikutake envisioned.

OMA’s work at the Edo-Tokyo Museum is a testament to innovation without intrusion. It’s a collaboration that more profound understanding and appreciation of Metabolist architecture and public space, where historical context and modern technology coexist harmoniously.

Giant kabuki actor projection observes a visitor reading near wall.
A kabuki actor at building scale watches a visitor read — the collection and its audience share the same plane for the first time.

Source: urdesignmag.com