Famus womens in architectural profession

Famus womens in architectural profession

An Architect is a professional who transforms building designs into reality, ensuring functionality, safety, and creative vision. Collaborating with engineers, they develop concepts for structures that meet project goals and operational standards, bringing architectural projects to life.

Looking from third eye this profession looks like, heavy extrovert site coordination work with client, many consultants, till labour and contractor. One may find this for male oriented, as in the 21st century it remains a male-dominated field. But it seems, Architecture as a profession has attracted women since the late 19th century only. (Ref: Britannica)

We find various interesting projects like museums, universities, skyscrapers, City development etc in every corner of the world designed by creative Women Architects.

Just for reference we can find quick list of 8 famous Women Architects all around the World, who built—even whole cities—in every corner of the world with special recognition.

The Japanese architect and principal with her partner Ryue Nishizawa of the Tokyo-based firm SANAA rose to fame with her dramatic designs, many for contemporary art museums: 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan (2004); Glass Museum, Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, Ohio (2006); New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City (2007); and the Louvre Lens, an annex to the Paris museum in northern France (2012), to name a few. Sejima, with her partner, has won numerous awards, including the Pritzker Prize in 2010.

 She designed many notable multi-family affordable housing projects, among other works. She was feminist, social activist, and an architect. A force to be reckoned with, was called “Dragon Lady” by her peers led the first AIA task force on women in 1974 at the American Institute of Architects (AIA) pointing out that only 1.2 percent of architects were women. She made a career of restoring historic buildings and designing affordable housing. In 1990 she and her husband, Harold, received the AIA New York Chapter’s Andrew J. Thomas Pioneer in Housing Award. She became the first woman to be elected to the Board of Directors of New York’s AIA chapter and was a founding member of the Alliance of Women in Architecture in 1972. Edelman was also the inspiration for the 1974 children’s book What Can She Be? An Architect, by Gloria and Esther Goldreich.

This British modernist architect left her mark in her own country as well as in Africa, the Middle East, India, and Sri Lanka. Her most famous project was the development of Chandigarh, the new capital city of Punjab, India, in 1951. She worked alongside Le Corbusier, her husband and partner Maxwell Fry, and Pierre Jeanneret to create a modern city from scratch. She and Fry focused on designing affordable, practical housing. Among her many other accomplishments, she was also instrumental to the establishment of the Institute of Contemporary Art in London, securing its land and designing its interior.

Architect, planner, urbanist, theorist, writer and educator have had a global influence on architects for nearly fifty years, transforming thinking about architecture and cities. , Scott Brown has an impressive list of accomplishments as an architec  t, theorist, and educator. Often overshadowed by her husband (also her partner), Robert Venturi, Scott Brown made headlines when she was excluded from the Pritzker Prize awarded to Venturi in 1991. Through their writings and building designs, she and her husband were pioneers in the move away from modernist glass-and-steel structures, favoring instead the use of ornament and historical and vernacular references. Her architectural design and planning can be seen on university campuses throughout the United States and her preservation planning in historic districts in Philadelphia; Galveston, Texas; and Miami Beach, Florida.

A true “starchitect,” Gang has steadily risen to the top of her field since her firm opened in 1997. She became a household name with her addition of the Aqua Tower (2010) to the Chicago skyline. She and Studio Gang have won numerous awards and were the subject of a solo exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago in 2012-13. Some of her notable works include the SOS Lavezzorio Community Center (2008), the Nature Boardwalk at the Lincoln Park Zoo (2010), and the WMS Boathouse at Clark Park (2013), all in Chicago.

Hayden was the first woman to be accepted to and graduate from (1890) MIT’s prestigious architecture program. Despite her credentials, she had a hard time finding work once she graduated. Her big break came when her design was chosen for the Women’s Building of the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. Unfortunately, she retired from the male-dominated architecture field after enduring unfair treatment throughout the construction of the building and when she saw her remarkable accomplishment torn down after the fair. Imagine what she might have achieved were she living a century later

The most famous architect on the list, Hadid was the first woman to win the Pritzker Prize (2004). Besides that honor, her big personality and bold designs have proven she could hold her own in the still male-dominated field. Her buildings are distinct, incorporating asymmetry, fluidity, and unexpected twists and turns. Some of her award-winning works include the National Center for Contemporary Arts in Rome (2010), Evelyn Grace Academy, London (2011), and the Heydar Aliyev Center, Baku, Azerbaijan (2012).

A modernist architect, Bo Bardi did most of her work in her adopted home of Brazil. She was a prolific designer of buildings, jewelry, and furniture. Her 1950s bowl chair remains her best known design. She dedicated her life’s work to creating a truly Brazilian vernacular architecture. The needs and habits of her buildings’ inhabitants were primary to her design ethic. She lived and designed buildings in impoverished regions of Brazil and put her efforts toward the preservation of historic districts there. Her Museum of Art of São Paulo (1968) and Social Service for Commerce Building-Pompéia, São Paulo (built in stages, 1977-86) are icons of the city.

(Ref: Britannica)