From U of T to Ishinomaki: future city builder David Wang embraces Japan鈥檚 DIY spirit
They're the new generation of Toronto city builders.
Meet the ambitious University of Toronto students and recent grads poised to become big players in shaping the city鈥檚 identity and contributing to its growth.
This ongoing series from Romi Levine, who covers the city beat for U of T News, shares their stories.
After an earthquake in 2011 ravaged Japan, the small city of Ishinomaki was in ruins. Over 3,000 people were dead, and more than 50,000 buildings were either damaged or destroyed.
Out of the rubble came a small furniture workshop called , founded by Tokyo-based architect Keiji Ashizawa. The lab's focus was to teach residents how to fix their houses and build their own furniture, helping to restore normality and rebuild the city.
University of Toronto alumnus David Wang learned about Ishinomaki Laboratory in 2015 during his final year of university when he was studying abroad in Tokyo.
鈥淚t's an authentic story of how a community used basic tools to slowly pick themselves up,鈥 says Wang, who majored in Asia-Pacific studies and East Asian studies at U of T's Munk School of Global Affairs.
Wang began his forays into Asia as an undergrad with brief trips abroad. He participated in a Woodsworth Summer Abroad course taught in Shanghai, and in his third year, he went on one of the Faculty of Arts & Science's , travelling to China鈥檚 Yanbian Autonomous Prefecture. (.) He also travelled to Taiwan to with fellow student and filmmaker Betty Xie (also supported by the Faculty of Arts & Science) and in 2014 he spent a year abroad at Waseda University.
He was supported by the and the . The latter award subsidized research trips to the devastated Tohoku region, where Wang learned about community-based, grassroots initiatives started after the 2011 disaster for local and regional revitalization
After interning with Ishinomaki in the summer of 2015, he was hired hired full time a year later.
The company has since evolved to become a profitable furniture company that sells mostly minimalistic wooden items. As a project manager, Wang plays a big part in helping Ishinomaki expand internationally.
鈥淭he overseas expansion was a good fit for my skills. It was something I felt like I could immediately contribute to,鈥 he says.
The company only has five full-time staff so Wang has had to become a jack-of-all-trades. Not only is Wang taking on international distribution, he鈥檚 also Ishinomaki鈥檚 marketer and translator. He鈥檚 even become adept in the workshop 鈥 learning how to build, drill, sand and pack furniture.
Wang says he has a new appreciation for hands-on work.
鈥淩ight now, at least in North America, what's really popular is tech-literacy like coding,鈥 he says. 鈥淲oodworking, working with your hands 鈥 I see it as old-school programming using these tools. You鈥檙e making stuff through a series of logical processes, and you're shooting for a finished product to solve something. It鈥檚 design thinking.鈥
Ishinomaki Laboratory is still loyal to its do-it-yourself roots 鈥 it continues to hold workshops in the city and all over Asia.
This past weekend, Wang was in Singapore running a stool-building workshop for the city鈥檚 Design Week. At the end of the month, the lab is heading to the Philippines to teach residents of a gentrifying Manila neighbourhood how to build furniture.
鈥淲e're working with these people to see if what we learned in Ishinomaki and the spirit of DIY can be transmitted as a cultural exchange,鈥 Wang says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a worldwide movement.鈥
Wang says he wouldn鈥檛 have pursued job opportunities in Japan were it not for his time studying abroad.
鈥淚t's good to have these kinds of experiences when you're young because you still have a malleable mindset, and it really can expand your mind to what鈥檚 possible,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was a desire to actualize the knowledge I gained in the classroom 鈥 put some meat around it.鈥
The chance to learn drew Wang to Japan, but Ishinomaki Laboratory is what convinced him to stick around.
鈥淚'm a bit of an idealist at heart,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don't really think I'm selling furniture, I'm selling the story. I'm presenting the story to consumers.鈥