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MOSHE SAFDIE


'Moshe Safdie', C.C., B.Arch., LL.D. , F.R.A.I.C., FAIA (b. July 14, 1938) is an architect and urban designer. He was born in the town of Haifa, Israel. He moved with his family to Montreal, Canada when he was a teenager, a move he disliked as a dedicated Zionist and socialist.

Contents
Career
Architectual projects
Publications
See also
External links

Career


An excellent student, he studied architecture at McGill University and apprenticed under Louis Kahn in Philadelphia. At age 24, his master's thesis was selected to be constructed as part of the Expo 67 celebration. The Habitat 67 project, a complex of cellular residences that could be lifted into place like LEGO blocks, propelled him onto the world stage. In 1967, he returned to Israel, where he was part of the team that refurnished Old Jerusalem. He lives in a renovated home in the old city and has Israeli, U.S., and Canadian citizenship.
In 1976, he became a professor at Harvard University and set up his firm's head office in nearby Somerville, Massachusetts, where it remains today. In 1986, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada and was promoted to Companion in 2005. His nephew is Dov Charney, the founder of the clothing company American Apparel.
His company, Moshe Safdie & Associates, is based out of Boston with branch offices in Toronto and Jerusalem.
His son Oren Safdie is a playwright.

Architectual projects


Moshe Safdie's works are known for their dramatic curves, arrays of simple geometric patterns, and usage of windows and open spaces.
Modelled on the Colosseum in Rome, Vancouver Library Square is one of Safdie's most recent Canadian commissions, and one of his most popular


★ Coldspring New Town, Baltimore, Maryland

Habitat 67 at Expo 67 World's Fair, Montreal, Quebec

★ Jepson Center for the Arts, Savannah, Georgia

★ The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario

★ City plan for the city of Modi'in, Israel

★ Former Ottawa City Hall, Ottawa, Ontario

★ Several major buildings, including the new central museum, opened 2005, at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, Israel

Hebrew Union College, first phase and Merkaz Shimshon expansion, Jerusalem, Israel

Mamilla Centre and David's Village, Jerusalem, Israel

Vancouver Library Square, Vancouver, British Columbia

Ford Center for the Performing Arts, Vancouver, British Columbia

★ Main Branch of the Salt Lake City Public Library, Salt Lake City, Utah

★ Airside building of Terminal 3, Ben Gurion International Airport, Israel

The Marina Bay Sands, Singapore's first integrated resort and casino

Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, Kansas City, Missouri

The Class of 1959 Chapel, Harvard Business School, Cambridge, Massachusetts

★ The Grave of Yitzhak Rabin and Lea Rabin

★ The campus of Hebrew College in Newton, Massachusetts

★ The Jean-Noël Desmarais Pavilion of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

★ The 2003 redesign of the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts

Eleanor Roosevelt College campus, UC San Diego

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art (scheduled to open in 2009)

United States Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C. (construction scheduled to begin in 2007)

★ The Exploration Place Science Museum in Wichita, Kansas

Publications



★ ''The City After the Automobile: An Architect's Vision'' (1998)

★ ''Beyond Habitat by 20 Years'' (1987)

★ ''Beyond Habitat'' (1970)

See also



Hebrew College

External links



The Safdie Hypermedia Archive-- McGill Univ.

Moshe Safdie and Associates

CBC Digital archives-- "Moshe Safdie: Hero of Habitat"

Rabin awaits Safdie, Maayan Magazine, 2006.

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