Galia Solomonoff

Galia Solomonoff AIA is an Argentinian-born architect and the founding creative director of New York-based architecture and design firm Solomonoff Architecture Studio. Her notable projects include Dia:Beacon; the Defective Brick Project; multiple residential projects in Manhattan and Brooklyn; and competition proposals for institutional projects around the world.

Galia Solomonoff in 2013.

Biography

Born in Rosario, Argentina, Solomonoff received her Masters in Architecture from Columbia University, where she was awarded the McKim Prize for Excellence in Design and the William Kinne Fellows Traveling Prize, and her BA from City College, where she was named Best Student of the School of Architecture in 1990. Prior to founding SAS, Solomonoff worked with OMA/Rem Koolhaas (Office for Metropolitan Architecture), Rafael Viñoly, and Bernard Tschumi Architects, as well as OpenOffice, which she co-founded. She has taught at the Rhode Island School of Design, Princeton University, The Cooper Union, Yale University, and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation. Solomonoff is the recipient of two AIA Design Awards, grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts, and recognition in the Architectural League of New York’s Emerging Voices series. She has been featured in the New York Times,[1] New York Magazine's premiere issue of editor Wendy Goodman's stand-alone Design Hunting,[2] More Magazine,[3] and Designers & Books.[4] In 2007, New York named her part of New York's "next garde".[5]

Selected Projects

  • "Mini Marfa" Townhouse, New York
  • Dia:Beacon
  • Angelo Galasso Store, Plaza Hotel, New York
  • Kaffe 1668
  • Lillian Ball Studio
  • Tribeca Apartment
  • Park Avenue South Lobby Renovation
  • East Village Condominiums
  • Brooklyn Townhouse and Photography Studio
  • Chelsea Loft
  • West Village Carriage House

Selected publications

  • Post-Ductility: Metals in Architecture and Engineering, eds. Michael Bell and Craig Buckley (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2012)
  • Public Housing: A New Conversation (New York: Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, Columbia University GSAPP, 2009)
  • Layered Urbanisms: Gregg Pasquarelli / Galia Solomonoff / Mario Gooden (New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2008 )
  • Latin American Architecture: Six Voices (Studies in Architecture and Culture, No 5)
  • “Defecting Fame,” Perspecta 37 (2005): 122-130
gollark: muahahahaha.
gollark: Weird how the moderators seem to have mostly all picked more muted/dark colors.
gollark: > pirating MP3s despite the existence of better modern audio codecs
gollark: Wouldn't you also have to recharge it a lot, if you *could* somehow make it work? There doesn't seem to be much room for a battery, and I can't see any charging ports on the picture.
gollark: Also, you don't have to deal with issues caused by gloves or masks or whatever. As much.

References

  1. Joyce Cohen, "When Live-Work No Longer Works" New York Times 2010
  2. David Hay, Warhol, Hirst, and Finger Paintings, http://nymag.com/homedesign/design-hunting/2012/spring/warhol-hirst-greenwich-village/
  3. Susan Swimmer, "Architects of Style" Archived 2012-06-14 at the Wayback Machine, More Magazine 2012
  4. "Galia Solomonoff's Book List" Designers & Books 2012
  5. David Colman, "The Next Garde", New York Magazine 2007


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