About I.M. Pei / 貝聿銘
I.M. Pei / 貝聿銘
Ieoh Ming Pei / 貝聿銘
Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate
1983
www.pritzkerprize.com/pei.htm
Ieoh Ming Pei (貝聿銘) (b. April 26, 1917), commonly known by his initials I. M. Pei, is a Pritzker Prize-winning Chinese American architect, known as the last master of high modernist architecture. He works with the abstract form, using stone, concrete, glass, and steel. Pei is perhaps one of the most successful architects of the 20th century, with built work all over the world.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I._M._Pei
Project list
* 1954–1959 — Mile High Center, in Denver, Colorado, USA
* 1960– Erieview Plan Cleveland, Ohio
* 1961–1967 — National Center for Atmospheric Research, in Boulder, Colorado, USA
* 1961 — Kips Bay Plaza, in New York, New York, USA [1]
* 1961 — Government Center Master Plan, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
* 1962 — Place Ville-Marie, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada
* 1962 — Kennedy Theatre, University of Hawaii, USA, Official web page
* 1962 — Hale Manoa Dormitory, East West Center, University of Hawaii, USA
* 1963 — Luce Memorial Chapel, Tunghai University, Taichung, Taiwan
* 1963 — Society Hill Towers – Philadelphia, PA, Unofficial website
* 1964 — Green Building, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
* 1964 — S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University — Syracuse, New York
* 1966–1968 — Sculpture Wing of the Des Moines Art Center in Des Moines, Iowa
o Official page of Pei's Sculpture Wing
* 1966 — Silver Towers at New York University
* 1967 — Hoffman Hall at University of Southern California
* 1968–1972 — 50 FAA air traffic control towers, in various locations throughout the United States, such as O'Hare International Airport, Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, Columbia Metropolitan Airport (South Carolina), and Indianapolis International Airport (since demolished).
* 1968–1974 — Christian Science Center, in Boston, Massachusetts
* 1968 — Everson Museum of Art, in Syracuse, New York
* 1969 — Cleo Rogers Memorial Library, in Columbus, Indiana
* 1969 — Academic Center, State University of New York at Fredonia, Fredonia, New York
* 1970 — National Airlines terminal at JFK Airport in New York, New York
* 1971 — Harbor Towers, in Boston, Massachusetts
* 1971 — American Life Insurance Company Building (renamed Wilmington Tower), in Wilmington, Delaware
* 1972 — Governor's Residence Halls at SUNY Buffalo
* 1972 — Dallas City Hall, Dallas, Texas
* 1972 — Paul Mellon Arts Center at Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, Connecticut
* 1972 — Pei Residence Halls at New College of Florida, Sarasota, Florida
* 1973 — Commerce Court West in Toronto, Ontario
* 1973 — Spelman Halls at Princeton University
* 1973 — Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York
* 1974–1978 — East Building, National Gallery of Art, in Washington, DC[4]
o Official East Building project webpage
* 1975 — OCBC Centre in Singapore.
* 1975 — The Lamar Building Penthouse in Augusta, Georgia
* 1976 — John Hancock Tower, in Boston, Massachusetts — Pei gives Henry Cobb the credit for this building
* 1976 — University of Rochester's Wilson Commons
* 1978–1982 — Indiana University Art Museum in Bloomington, Indiana
* 1979 — John F. Kennedy Library, in Boston, Massachusetts[5]
* 1979 — One Dallas Centre, in Dallas, Texas[6]
* 1979 — Baltimore World Trade Center, in Baltimore, Maryland
* 1979–1986 — Javits Convention Center in New York, New York
* 1980–1985 — Raffles City in Singapore.
* 1981 — the Texas Commerce Tower in Houston, Texas, currently the JPMorgan Chase Tower; (3D/International cooperated with Pei on the design of this building). The nearby drive-in bank was Pei's first drive in bank project.
* 1982 — 16th Street Mall in Denver, Colorado.
* 1982–1990 — Bank of China Tower, in Hong Kong
o Bank of China Tower project website
* 1982 — Apartment for Steve Jobs
* 1983 — ARCO Tower, Dallas, Texas
* 1985 — Wiesner building, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts
* 1986 — Fountain Place, Dallas, Texas
* 1987 — CenTrust Tower (now Bank of America Tower), Miami, Florida
* 1987 — IBM/Somers Office Complex, Somers, NY
* 1989 — Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center in Dallas, Texas
* 1989 — Carl C. Icahn Center for Science at Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, Connecticut
* 1989 — Headquarters for Creative Artists Agency, Los Angeles, California
* 1989 — Pyramids of the Louvre, in Paris, France with Peter Rice
o Pyramide du Louvre website. (See also: La Pyramide Inversée.)
* 1990 — The Gateway, Singapore
* 1991 — Miho Museum, Shiga, Japan
o Official museum website
o Official information on the architecture
* 1992 — The Kirklin Clinic of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Health System, Birmingham, Alabama
* 1994 — Four Seasons Hotel New York, New York City, New York
* 1995 — Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in Cleveland, Ohio
* 1997 — Miho Museum, near Kyoto, Japan.
* 1999–2006 — Musée d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean, in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg
o Official museum website The Folly at Oare House in England
* 2000 — Dexter the Jack Russel's Ears, Pershore, UK
* 2001 — Essensa East Forbes, Fort Bonifacio, Philippines
* 2001 — Friend Center for Engineering, at Princeton University.
* 2002 — Tour EDF, La Défense, France
* 2003 — extension building to the Deutsches Historisches Museum (German history museum), in Berlin, Germany.
* 2004 — Torre Espacio, Madrid, Spain
* 2005 — Ferguson Center for the Performing Arts at Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Virginia.
* 2005 — Bossone Research Enterprise Center at Drexel University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
* 2006 — Martha Stewart Center for Living at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan (currently under construction).
* 2006 — Embassy of the People’s Republic of China, Washington D.C.(currently under construction).
* 2002–2006 — New wing of Suzhou Museum, in Suzhou, China
* 2004–2007 — Museum of Islamic Arts in Doha, Qatar
* 2002–2008 — Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, CA
* 2009 — NASCAR Hall of Fame, Charlotte, North Carolina.
*


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