| |||||||||||||||
by Brad Collins
|
by Raul A. Barreneche
|
by Richard Meier
|
by Sophia Cheviakoff
|
by Hugh Newell Jacobsen
|
But because GS's residential projects, as diversely striking as they are, continuously manage to look (especially from the outside) like anything but places where people actually live, the book's subsequent sections offer almost a sense of relief--these are the kinds of projects at which the firm excels, and those upon which it has built its considerable reputation: the gleaming, Meier-esque white tiles and columns of its 1987 office building for IBM in Greensboro, North Carolina; an ingenious new set of unapologetically modern innards (1973) jutting out of the august, old stone exterior of Princeton University's Whig Hall, whose original wood interior was destroyed in a fire; an elegantly high-tech Science, Industry and Business Library for New York City (1996); blond wood, luminous marble, and stainless steel fitted inside the 1911 Beaux Arts envelope of the former B. Altman department store; and--perhaps the firm's most high-profile (and controversial) commission to date--the 1992 renovation and addition to Frank Lloyd Wright's landmark Guggenheim Museum, also in New York City--an undertaking that managed to vastly increase the museum's gallery and administrative space and address omissions or weaknesses in the original structure, all while linking it to a discreetly handsome limestone rectilinear addition that deferred not to a gamut of political interests but to Wright's original plans for a proposed annex.
Many other notable projects are included in the book as well, including an array of new buildings for Cornell University and an addition to Harvard's venerable Fogg Museum, not to mention the warm-toned Museum of Contemporary Art (1996) that has redefined downtown Miami, and a renovation/addition for the University of Washington's Henry Art Gallery in Seattle (1997). A complex multivolume, multilevel, multiline configuration that somehow manages remarkably to leave the gallery's charming, original red-brick structure from 1927 as its centerpiece, it is this last entry which serves as a fitting final reminder that no one takes simple shapes and fashions them into something chic, clean, and clever quite as deftly or respectfully as Gwathmey Siegel. --Timothy Murphy --This text refers to the Perfect Paperback edition.
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
![]() |
77% buy the item featured on this page: Gwathmey Siegel$61.43 |
![]() |
17% buy Gwathmey Siegel: Buildings and Projects 1992-2002 |
![]() |
3% buy Gwathmey Siegel: Buildings and Projects, 1982-1992$54.75 |
![]() |
3% buy 50 of the World's Best Apartments (Images) $37.80 |
Suggested Tags from Similar Products(What's this?)Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product).
|
|
There are no customer reviews yet.
|
|||
|
Video reviews
|
|
|
After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in. |