Bernard Tschumi

Front Cover
Universe Publishing, a division of Rizzoli International Pub., 2003 - Architecture - 176 pages
Bernard Tschumi is often touted as one of the world's best modern architects. The architect achieved early fame by winning the competition to design the Parc de la Villette, a 125-acre, $300-million public park on the northeast edge of Paris that featured bright red deconstructivist pavilions. Tschumi is widely credited with leading Columbia's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation into the digital revolution and in the process positioning the school at the forefront of the architectural vanguard. During his fifteen-year tenure, Tschumi continued to build and the results are amply illustrated in this new monograph, the first to document Tschumi's full career. Projects included: Le Fresnoy National Studio for Contemporary Arts in Tourcoing, France (1998); Columbia University's Lerner Hall Student Center (1999); Marne La Vallee School of Architecture, Paris (1999); the Interface Flon, a bus, train, and subway station and pedestrian bridge in Lausanne, Switzerland (2000); a Concert Hall and Exhibition Complex in Rouen (2001); the new Florida International School of Architecture in Miami; the Museum for African Art in New York; and the New Acropolis Museum in Athens.

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Contents

The Autonomy Effect
7
Intertextuality
19
Continuity
155

2 other sections not shown

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About the author (2003)

K. Michael Hays is Eliot Noyes Professor of Architecture Theory at Harvard University Graduate School of Design as well as Adjunct Curator of Architecture at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

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