Grimshaw Architects
Industry | Architecture |
---|---|
Founded | London, United Kingdom 1980 |
Number of locations | 7 Studios Los Angeles New York City Paris Dubai Melbourne Sydney |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Sir Nicholas Grimshaw (founder) Andrew Whalley (Chairman) |
Services | Architecture, Industrial Design |
Website | Grimshaw |
Grimshaw Architects (formerly Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners) is an architectural firm based in London. Founded in 1980 by Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, the firm was one of the pioneers of high-tech architecture.[1] In particular, they are known for their design of transport projects including Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA railway station, Waterloo International railway station and the award-winning Southern Cross railway station which was the recipient of the Royal Institute of British Architects Lubetkin Prize.[2] Grimshaw is behind the design of the Sustainability Pavilion, an innovative net-zero building, for Expo 2020.[3] The firm currently has offices in Los Angeles, New York, London, Paris, Dubai, Melbourne and Sydney, employing over 600 staff.
Organisation[]
Partners[]
Grimshaw has 21 partners worldwide: Jolyon Brewis, Keith Brewis, Andrew Byrne, Vincent Chang, Andrew Cortese, Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, William Horgan, Mark Husser, Michael Janeke, Ewan Jones, Annelie Kvick Thompson, , Declan McCafferty, Neill McClements, Mark Middleton, Andrew Perez, Juan Porral, Neven Sidor, Neil Stonell, Andrew Thomas, and Andrew Whalley.[4]
Project list[]
Major projects, by year of completion and ordered by type, are:
Arts and culture[]
- Oxford Ice Rink, Oxford, UK, 1984
- British Pavilion, Expo '92, Seville, Spain, 1992
- Eden Project, Cornwall, UK, 2001
- National Space Centre, Leicester, UK, 2001
- Caixa Galicia Art Foundation, A Coruña, Spain, 2006
- Thermae Bath Spa, Bath, 2006
- Horno 3: Museo del Acero, Museum of Steel, Monterrey, Mexico, 2007
- Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC), Troy, US, 2008
- Mobilizarte Mobile Pavilion, Brazil, 2012
- Queens Museum of Art, Queens, 2013
- Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science, Miami, US 2014
- Shanghai Disney Resort Tomorrowland, Shanghai, China, 2016
- Arter (art center) Contemporary Art Museum, Istanbul, Turkey, 2019
- Sustainability Pavilion, Expo 2020 Dubai, 2020
Bridges[]
- IJburg Bridge, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2001
- Newport City footbridge, Newport, South Wales, 2006
- Seafarers Bridge, Melbourne, Australia, 2008
- A40 Western Avenue Footbridge, London, UK, 2009
Science and education[]
- Eden Project: The Core, Cornwall, UK, 2005
- University College London: Roberts Building Front Extension, London, UK, 2007
- University College London Cancer Institute: Paul O Gorman Building, London, UK, 2007
- London School of Economics: New Academic Building, London, UK, 2009
- London South Bank University, London, UK, 2010
- New York University Polytechnic: Rogers Hall, Brooklyn, US, 2011
- Doherty Institute, Melbourne, Australia, 2014
- Boldrewood Innovation Campus Phase 1, Southampton, UK, 2015
- University of New South Wales Hilmer Building, Sydney, Australia, 2015
- Bangor University Arts and Innovation Centre, Bangor, UK, 2016
- Dulwich College Laboratory, London, UK, 2016
- Duke University, The Richard H. Brodhead Center for Campus Life, Durham, NC, USA, 2016
Rail[]
- International Terminal, Waterloo Station, London, UK, 1993
- Paddington Station, London, UK, 1999
- Southern Cross railway station, Melbourne, Australia, 2006
- Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA Station, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 2007
- Nunawading railway station, Melbourne, Australia, 2010
- Fulton Center, Manhattan, US, 2014
- Reading railway station, Reading, UK, 2014
- London Bridge station, London, UK, 2018
- Mernda railway line Extension, Melbourne, Australia, 2018
- Vaughan Metropolitan Centre (TTC) station, Vaughan, Canada, 2018
- Sydney CBD and South East Light Rail, Sydney, Australia, 2019
Aviation[]
- Heathrow Airport Terminal 1, Pier 4A, UK, 1993
- Manchester Airport Terminal 3, UK, 1998
- Zurich Airport, Zurich, Switzerland, 2004
- Heathrow Airport Terminal 2B, UK, 2009
- Pulkovo Airport, St. Petersburg, Russia, 2013
- Istanbul New Airport Turkey, 2019
Office and workplace[]
- British Airways Operations, London, UK, 1993
- RAC Regional Control Centre, Bristol, UK, 1994
- Ludwig Erhaud Haus, Berlin, Germany, 1998
- Orange Operational Centre and Customer Service Facilities, Darlington, UK, 1998
- 25 Gresham Street, London, UK, 2002
- Eden Project: The Foundation, Cornwall, UK, 2002
- Five Boats Houding, Duisburg, Germany, 2005
- 385 Bourke Street, Melbourne, Australia, 2008
- The St Botolphs Building, London, UK, 2010
- John Lewis & Partners Fashion Pavilion, London, UK, 2011
- Highpoint Shopping Centre, Melbourne, Australia, 2013
- 699 Bourke Street, Melbourne, Australia, 2015
- 333 George Street, Sydney, Australia, 2016
- YOOX Net-a-Porter Group Tech Hub, London, UK, 2017
- Plexal Innovation Centre, London, UK, 2017
- Belfast City Quays 2, Belfast, Northern Ireland, 2018
- 664 Collins Street, Melbourne, Australia, 2018
- 50/60 Station Road, Cambridge, UK, 2019
- Olderfleet, Melbourne, Australia, 2020
Industry[]
- Herman Miller Factory, Bath, Somerset, UK, 1976
- Vitra Furniture Factory, Weil am Rhein, Germany, 1981
- Herman Miller Factory, Chippenham, UK, 1982
- Financial Times Printworks, London, UK, 1988
- Western Morning News, Plymouth, UK, 1993
- Igus Factory & Headquarters, Cologne, Germany, 2000
- Donald Danforth Plant Center, St. Louis, US, 2001
- Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Manufacturing Plant & Headquarters, West Sussex, UK, 2003
- Suez Environnement Energy from Waste Facility, Suffolk, UK, 2014
- Herman Miller (manufacturer) Portal Mill, Melksham, UK, 2015
Mixed use and housing[]
- Sainsbury's Store & Grand Union Walk Housing, London, UK, 1988
- Via Verde – The Green Way, The Bronx, US, 2012
- Harbour Mill Apartments, Sydney, Australia, 2015
Awards[]
2019[]
- Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Royal Gold Medal for Architecture awarded to Sir Nicholas Grimshaw[5]
- AJ 100: Practice of the Year[6]
- AIANY + ASLANY Transportation + Infrastructure Design Excellence Awards—Vaughan Metropolitan Centre station
- SCUP Outstanding Achievement in Integrated Planning and Design—Duke University Brodhead Center
2018[]
- SCUP Excellence in Landscape Architecture (General Design)—Duke University Brodhead Center
- World Architecture Festival 'Transport- Completed Buildings' Category Winner—London Bridge station Redevelopment
- Structural Steel Design Awards—London Bridge station Redevelopment
- British Construction Industry Awards (BCIA), Transport Project of the Year, ICE200 Award—London Bridge station Redevelopment
- British Transport Awards, Station of the Year— London Bridge station Redevelopment
- City of Sydney Lord Mayor's Prize, NSW AIA Awards, Commendation—333 George Street
- NSW AIA Award, Commendation—333 George Street Interior fit-out
- Chicago Athenaeum Award—333 George Street
- Design Impact Awards, Australian Interior Design Awards—Highpoint Shopping Centre
- AJ 100: International Practice of the Year[7]
- New London Awards, Overall Prize—London Bridge station Redevelopment
- New London Awards, Transport and Infrastructure—London Bridge station Redevelopment
- New London Awards, Sustainability Prize—London Bridge station Redevelopment
- RSAW Welsh Architecture Awards—Bangor University, Arts and Innovation Centre
2017[]
- Civic Trust Awards– SUEZ Energy-from-Waste
- Civic Trust Awards– Southampton Boldrewood Phase 1
- RIBA National Award– The Laboratory, Dulwich College
- ICE 'Greatest Contribution to London'– London Bridge station Redevelopment
- AJ Retrofit Awards International Retrofit Project– Duke University Brodhead Center
- ENR Southeast Best Cultural Project– Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science
- ENR Southeast Higher Education/Research Award of Merit– Duke University Brodhead Center
2016[]
- Commonwealth Institute of Architects; Robert Matthew Awards
- AJ 100: International Practice of the Year
2015[]
- AIA New York COTE Award – Via Verde (designed with Dattner Architects)
- AIA New York: Medal of Honor
- AJ 120: Project of the Year—Fulton Center
- BCI Award: International Project of the Year—Fulton Center
2014[]
- MASterworks Award: Best Adaptive Reuse—Queens Museum
2013[]
- Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) International Award— Via Verde
- 2013 AIA Housing and Urban Development Secretary's Award— Via Verde
- AIA New York State Award of Excellence— Via Verde
2012[]
- Carbuncle Cup – Building Design Awards
2009[]
- AIA Honor Award – Horno 3: Museo Del Acero
2008[]
- Architectural Practice of the Year – Building Design Awards
- World Architect of the Year – Building Design Awards
- Transport Architect of the Year – Building Design Awards
- 2008 RIBA European Award – Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA Station
- Royal Institute of Dutch Architects – Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA Station
- Stirling Prize Runner up – Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA Station
2007[]
- Lubetkin Prize – Southern Cross Station, Melbourne, Australia[2]
- 2007 RIBA International Award – Southern Cross Station, Melbourne, Australia[8]
Controversy[]
In October 2019, UK publications Construction News and Architects' Journal published a joint investigation into fatalities at Istanbul Airport - nicknamed by workers "the cemetery" as so many have died. By this point, the official death toll was 55, but unofficial estimates suggested the figure could "be higher than 400".[9] Grimshaw was one of four architects employed on the airport's design, three of them UK-based (the other two were Scott Brownrigg and Haptic Architects). As concept architects, Grimshaw ceased working on the project before the construction phase, and voiced shock and sadness about what it described as the "alarmingly high number" of subsequent deaths.[9]
Exhibitions[]
Grimshaw's first exhibition titled Product + Process debuted in 1988. The firm has since produced four exhibitions: Structure Space + Skin (1993), Fusion [10] (1998), Equilibrium[11] (2000), and Micro to Macro: Grimshaw in New York [12] (2007). The latest exhibition, Equation: Design Inspired by Nature, launched on Wednesday, 20 February 2013 at The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) Centre in Singapore. Equation explores a series of themes that investigate biomimicry, biophilia and ecosystems and their influence on design.[13]
Publications[]
- Grimshaw Architecture: The First Thirty Years[14]
- Blue 02: Systems and Structure[15]
- Blue 01: Water, Energy and Waste[16]
- The Sketchbooks of Nicholas Grimshaw[17]
- The Making of Station Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA[18]
- The Architecture of Eden[19]
- Equilibrium[20]
- Grimshaw: Architecture, Industry and Innovation[21]
- Structure, Space and Skin: The Work of Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners[22]
- British Pavilion Seville Exposition[23]
See also[]
- Nicholas Grimshaw buildings and structures
- List of architecture firms
- List of architects
References[]
Notes[]
- ^ Davies, Colin. "High Tech Architecture" (PDF). Retrieved 2 April 2009.
- ^ Jump up to: a b World Architecture News. "Grimshaw's Southern Cross Station wins Lubetkin prize". Retrieved 26 October 2011.
- ^ "Sustainability first and foremost". 3 March 2020.
- ^ ArchitypeSource. "Grimshaw Architects Profile". Archived from the original on 1 September 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
- ^ "RIBA Honors Nicholas Grimshaw with 2019 Royal Gold Medal". architectmagazine.com. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ Hurst, Will (19 June 2019). "Grimshaw wins AJ100 Practice of the Year 2019". Architects Journal. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ "AJ100 - Grimshaw". aj100.architectsjournal.co.uk. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ RIBA website. "RIBA International Awards / Winners 2007". Archived from the original on 23 May 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Garner-Purkis, Zac; Hurst, Will (10 October 2019). "Investigation: the human cost of building the world's biggest airport". Architects' Journal. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
- ^ Images Publishing (2001). International Architecture Yearbook 7. ISBN 9781864701036. Retrieved 15 February 2013.
- ^ Hugh Pearman. "Equilibrium: The Work of Nicholas Grimshaw and Partners". Archived from the original on 31 July 2012. Retrieved 15 February 2013.
- ^ E-Oculus. "Macro to Micro: Grimshaw in New York". Retrieved 15 February 2013.
- ^ URA. "Equation". Retrieved 15 February 2013.
- ^ Merrick, Jay; Grimshaw, Nicholas; Partners, Nicholas Grimshaw and (2011). Grimshaw Architects: The First 30 Year. ISBN 978-3791350738.
- ^ Blue 02: Systems and Structure. ISBN 0982587511.
- ^ Blue 01: Water, Energy and Waste. 2009. ISBN 978-0982587508.
- ^ Grimshaw, Nicholas; Farthing, Stephen; Davey, Peter (2009). The Sketchbooks of Nicholas Grimshaw. ISBN 978-1905711628.
- ^ Sdu Uitgevers. "The Making of Station Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA". Archived from the original on 25 May 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
- ^ Pearman, Hugh; Whalley, Andrew (2003). The Architecture of Eden. ISBN 1903919150.
- ^ Pearman, Hugh (5 January 2000). Equilibrium. ISBN 0714839582.
- ^ Amery, Colin (30 March 2000). Grimshaw: Architecture, Industry and Innovation. ISBN 0714839345.
- ^ Powell, Kenneth (19 October 1995). Structure, Space and Skin: The Work of Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners. ISBN 0714834572.
- ^ Davies, Colin (January 1992). British Pavilion Seville Exposition. ISBN 0714827479.
External links[]
- Architecture firms based in London
- Design companies established in 1984
- 1984 establishments in England