Richard Meier

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From large-scale architectural projects to design: world-famous architect Richard Meier continues to work with Italcementi, a leading manufacturer of innovative materials for the building community.

MeierRichard   Meier   received   his   architectural   training   at   Cornell University and established his own office in New York in 1963. His practice has been awarded major civic commissions in the United States, Europe, and Asia, including courthouses and city halls, museums, corporate headquarters, and housing and private residences.

Among his most well-known projects are The Getty Center in Los Angeles;  the “Dives  in Misericordia”  Church  in Rome,  Italy;  the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia; 165 Charles Street & 173-176   Perry   Street   Condominiums   in   New   York;   the   Canal+ Television Headquarters in Paris, France; and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Barcelona, Spain.

In 1984, Mr. Meier was awarded the Pritzker Prize for Architecture, considered the field’s highest honor. In the same year, he was selected  architect  for the prestigious  commission  to design  The Getty Center in Los Angeles, which was opened to popular and critical acclaim in December 1997. Among the projects recently completed  by  Richard  Meier  &  Partners  are  the  Gagosian  Gallery  in  Los  Angeles;  Arp Museum in Germany;  the Ara Pacis Museum in Rome; the Burda Collection  Museum in Baden-Baden, Germany; the Broad Art Center at UCLA; the San Jose City Hall; Coffee Plaza in Hamburg, Germany; and the U.S. Courthouses in Islip, New York, and Phoenix, Arizona; and Weill Hall, the Life Sciences Technology Building at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. Projects  currently  under  construction  include  the  Italcementi  i.lab  in  Bergamo,  Italy;  a condominium complex in Jesolo, Italy; a residential tower in Tel Aviv, Israel; two residential towers in Tokyo, Japan; two hospitality and commercial projects in Mexico; a club house and hotel in China; and luxury residences in Bodrum (Turkey), Luxembourg, Shenzhen (China), Hartfordshire  (the UK) and Long Island (New York).

In 1997, Richard Meier received the AIA Gold Medal, the highest award from the American Institute of Architects and, in the same year, the Praemium Imperiale from the Japanese government in recognition of lifetime achievement in the arts. He is a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects  and the American  Institute of Architects,  and he received a Medal of Honor from the New York Chapter of the AIA in 1980 and a Gold Medal from the Los Angeles Chapter in 1998. His numerous awards include thirty National AIA Honor Awards and over fifty regional AIA Design Awards. In 1989, Richard Meier received the Royal Gold Medal from the Royal Institute of British Architects. In 1992, the French Government honored him as a Commander of Arts and Letters, and in 1995 he was elected Fellow to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Cooper- Hewitt Museum, the American Academy in Rome and the American Academy of Arts and Letters  from which he received the Gold Medal for Architecture  in 2008. He is currently working on his first monograph about his sculptures, collages, drawings and paintings with famous graphic designer Massimo Vignelli. He has received honorary degrees from the University of Naples, the New Jersey Institute of Technology, The New School for Social Research, Pratt Institute, the University of Bucharest, and North Carolina State University.

Richard Meier & Partners Architects – Home Page

Richard Meier Projects on arcVision.org

Richard Meier Project on arcVision.org

Jubilee Church  i.lab
dives OFI 2 i.lab-kmrosso stilizzato

 

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