Thursday, April 22, 2021

Artist of the Day, April 22, 2021: César Pelli, an Argentine-born American architect (#1264)

César Pelli (1926 – 2019) was an Argentine-American architect who designed some of the world's tallest buildings and other major urban landmarks. Two of his most notable buildings are the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur and the World Financial Center in New York City. The American Institute of Architects named him one of the ten most influential living American architects in 1991 and awarded him the AIA Gold Medal in 1995. In 2008, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat presented him with The Lynn S. Beedle Lifetime Achievement Award.

Pelli was born in San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina.His father was a civil servant, who had been reduced to doing odd jobs due to the Depression, while his mother worked as a teacher. Pelli studied architecture at the Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. He graduated in 1949, after which he designed low-cost housing projects. In 1952, he attended the University of Illinois School of Architecture in the United States for advanced study in architecture, and received his Master of Science in Architecture degree in 1954.

He married acclaimed landscape architect Diana Balmori, who worked as a partner at his company.

In 1952, Pelli moved to the United States with his wife, and became a naturalized citizen in 1964. After his graduation from the University of Illinois School of Architecture, Pelli worked for Eero Saarinen in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for ten years. While with Eero, he worked on the TWA terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport and the Morse and Stiles colleges at Yale University.

 Pelli designed his first landmark building with the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood, California, which was completed 1975 and became known by the locals as the "Blue Whale". The United States Embassy in Tokyo, Japan, was designed by Pelli in 1972 and completed in 1975. While practicing in Los Angeles, Pelli taught in the architecture program at UCLA.

In 1977, Pelli was selected to be the dean of the Yale School of Architecture in New Haven, Connecticut, and served in that post until 1984. Shortly after Pelli arrived at Yale, he won the commission to design the expansion and renovation of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which resulted in the establishment of his own firm, Cesar Pelli & Associates. The museum's expansion/renovation and the Museum of Modern Art Residential Tower were completed 1984; the World Financial Center in New York, which includes the grand public space of the Winter Garden, was completed in 1988. Among other significant projects during this period are the Crile Clinic Building in Cleveland, Ohio, completed 1984; Herring Hall at Rice University in Houston, Texas (also completed 1984); completion in 1988 of the Green Building at the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood, California; and the construction of the Wells Fargo Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 1989.

Pelli was named one of the ten most influential living American Architects by the American Institute of Architects in 1991. In 1995, he was awarded the American Institute of Architects Gold Medal. In May 2004, Pelli was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the University of Minnesota Duluth where he designed Weber Music Hall. In 2005, Pelli was honored with the Connecticut Architecture Foundation's Distinguished Leadership Award.

Buildings designed by Pelli during this period are marked by further experimentation with a variety of materials (most prominently stainless steel) and his evolution of the skyscraper. One Canada Square at Canary Wharf in London; Plaza Tower in Costa Mesa, California; and the NTT Headquarters in Tokyo were preludes to a landmark project that Pelli designed for Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The Petronas Towers were completed in 1997, sheathed in stainless steel and reflecting Islamic design motifs. The dual towers were the world's tallest buildings until 2004. That year, Pelli received the Aga Khan Award for Architecture for the design of the Petronas Towers.

The Cira Centre on the Schuylkill River, designed by Pelli, opened in January 2006. Pelli designed the master plan for Cira Centre South, the tallest building dedicated to student housing in the United States. The building houses students of the University of Pennsylvania and was completed in 2014. He was also architect of the 730-foot luxury mixed-use skyscraper FMC Tower as part of the Cira Centre South development.

This period saw the completion of several cultural/civic projects designed by Pelli. The Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, Florida, opened in 2006, the same year that Pelli's design for the Minneapolis Central Library completed construction, as well as the Renee and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall and Samueli Theater in Costa Mesa, California. Pelli designs for office towers and developments throughout Asia and South America have been completed in the past decade. In 2012, the three-building Pacific Design Center, which Pelli designed 40 years earlier while at Gruen Associates, was completed with the addition of the Red Building.

In May 2008, Pelli was given an honorary Doctor of Arts degree by Yale University. That same year, he received the Lynn S. Beedle Lifetime Achievement Award from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH). In 2012, Pelli was honored with the platinum Konex Award for architecture and the diamond Konex Award for visual arts.


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Mr. César Pelli

Union Park
Toronto, Canada, 1977

 Pacific Design Center, Green Building
West Hollywood, California, 1988

1989 Wells Fargo Tower
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA 1989

 St. Luke’s Medical Tower
Houston, Texas, USA, 1990

Owens Corning World Headquarters
Toledo, Ohio, USA, 1996

Petronas Towers
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 1997

Petronas Towers
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 1997

Petronas Towers
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 1997

 Chubu Cultural Center and Museum
Kurayoshi, Japan, 2003

 Gerald Ratner Athletics Center, University of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, USA, 2003

 International Finance Centre
Hong Kong, China, 2004

 International Finance Centre
Hong Kong, China, 2004

 Minneapolis Central Library
Minneapolis, Minnesota USA, 2006

 Connecticut Science Center
Hartford, Connecticut, USA, 2009

 Pacific Design Center, red building, 2012 
Green building, 1988 

 Pacific Design Center, Red Building
West Hollywood, California, USA, 2012

 UniCredit Headquarters, Porta Nuova Garibaldi
Milan, Italy, 2013

 Buerger Center for Advanced Pediatric Care
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, 2015

 Torre Costanera
Santiago, Chile, 2015

 Hancher, The University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa, USA, 2016

 Hancher, The University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa, USA, 2016

 Hancher, The University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa, USA, 2016

 São Paulo Corporate Towers
São Paulo, Brazil, 2016

 Salesforce Tower
San Francisco, California, USA, 2018

 Salesforce Tower
San Francisco, California, USA, 2018

 Sidra Medicine
Doha, Qatar, 2018

 Star Harbor International Center
Shanghai, China, 2018

 Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, 2019

 Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, 2019

 Wolf Point
Chicago, Illinois, USA, 2020

 Chengdu Museum of Natural History
Chengdu, China, 2021

 Chengdu Museum of Natural History
Chengdu, China, 2021

Block 185
Austin, Texas, USA, 2022

 XJH Centre (ITC)
Shanghai, China, will open in 2023

 

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