Architecture-Studio

Architecture-Studio is a French Architecture Practice created in 1973 in Paris. Around its 12 partners, Architecture-Studio brings together an international team of architects, town planners, interior designers, quantity surveyors and sustainable design specialists of twenty five different nationalities.

The Seat of the European Parliament in Strasbourg, the Arab World Institute in Paris (together with Jean Nouvel), and the Notre-Dame-de-l'Arche-d'Alliance Church in Paris are a few of Architecture-Studio's best known projects. Architecture-Studio has been developing over the years and has established new offices in Shanghai and Beijing, and more recently in Venice, Italy.

Philosophy

Architecture-Studio defines Architecture as "an art that is socially committed and engaged in the construction of mankind’s living environment". Architecture-Studio’s work is based on group culture, developing a real team work through a collective conception of Architecture; a will to go beyond individual interests in favour of dialogue and debate, thereby transforming all individual knowledge into collective creative potential.

Architecture-Studio believes that this also involves being open to encounters that can alter the way of thinking or, at least, inflect it (a book, a film, a man, a mistake on a building site…). This approach is a key to the conception process; a process which is not linear but iterative, not static but dynamic, not only intellectual and abstract but organic and concrete.

Associates

Carried by this open-minded attitude, Architecture-Studio's team has progressively grown. Martin Robain, the founder, has been joined by:

Office and subsidiaries

10 rue Lacuée, 12e Arrondissement (main office);

181 Guangfu Road, Zhabei (subsidiary) ;

6B Chaowai Street, Chaoyang (subsidiary) ;

Campiello Santa Maria Nova, Cannaregio (CA'ASI, exhibition space).

Main Projects

Arts High School in Clermont-Ferrand, 2006.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.