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Wohnregal Apartments and Ateliers / FAR frohn&rojas

Wohnregal Apartments and Ateliers / FAR frohn&rojas - Interior Photography, Apartments, FacadeWohnregal Apartments and Ateliers / FAR frohn&rojas - Interior Photography, Apartments, FacadeWohnregal Apartments and Ateliers / FAR frohn&rojas - ApartmentsWohnregal Apartments and Ateliers / FAR frohn&rojas - Exterior Photography, Apartments, FacadeWohnregal Apartments and Ateliers / FAR frohn&rojas - More Images+ 45

Spotlight: David Chipperfield

Spotlight: David Chipperfield - Image 8 of 4
David Chipperfield in 2012. Image © Flickr user br1dotcom licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

The career of British architect David Chipperfield (born 18 December 1953) has spanned decades and continents as an architect, designer and professor. Since 1984, he has been at the helm of David Chipperfield Architects, an award winning firm with over 180 staff at offices in London, Berlin, Milan, and Shanghai. Chipperfield is an honorary fellow of the American Institute of Architects and Germany's Bund Deutscher Architekten, and was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2004. In 2012, Chipperfield curated the Venice Biennale of Architecture under the theme Common Ground.

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Chipperfield On London's "Success-Based Culture"

Speaking to The Guardian, David Chipperfield has stated that he regards the hold of private investment over new architecture in London as an "absolutely terrible" means of building a city. He argues that Berlin - where he spends considerable amounts of time and runs a large office - "is a much more reflective society than ours" because the UK has sunk into "a success-based culture."

David Chipperfield's "Sticks and Stones" Toys with Van Der Rohe's Bones in Berlin

David Chipperfield's "Sticks and Stones" Toys with Van Der Rohe's Bones in Berlin - Featured Image
© Gili Merin

In Berlin, Mies van der Rohe’s Neue Nationalgalerie has begun a new phase today with the opening of David Chipperfield’s intervention, a prologue to the imminent restoration which the famed British architect is about to undertake. Completed in 1968, the gallery was Mies’ last project and his final masterpiece; for nearly fifty years, nobody dared to touch it - until now. Marking this event is a large, site-specific installation, created by Chipperfield as an attempt to engage Mies in a spatial experiment (or perhaps a last, apologetic tribute to the 20th-century master) moments before he is about to embark on a mission which will, inevitably, transform Mies’ ultimate legacy.

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