Waseda El Dorado
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c2/Waseda_El_Dorado_1.jpg/220px-Waseda_El_Dorado_1.jpg)
Waseda El Dorado, also known as Rhythms of Vision, is a building designed by the Japanese architect Von Jour Caux and built in August, 1983. It is located near the Waseda University campus in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.
The building design is a mixture of revival Art Nouveau (or Arts and Crafts) and Japanese culture. Its interior features a Buddhist stave's giant hand pointing down from a ceiling of stained glass. The curving wrought-iron balconies take the form of lily pads, and the wrought-iron banister gracefully zigzags past elegant Art Deco stained-glass windows. Tattoo-designs adorn the ceramic figures, green-gold wallpaper is imprinted by Edo-style woodblocks, and iridescent tiles reflect the art of inlaid mother-of-pearl.
Gallery
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External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- Waseda El Dorado at the Official site of Von Jour Caux
- The architecture of Tōkyō by Hiroshi Watanabe
35°42′29.7″N 139°43′18.9″E / 35.708250°N 139.721917°E / 35.708250; 139.721917
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- Founded: 1882
- Students: 51,129
- Endowment:
Category
Commons