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The American Institute of Architects Board of Directors on Dec. 10 awarded the AIA Gold Medal to Moshe Safdie, FAIA. Safdie first burst on the architecture scene with bold proclamations on the future of dwelling with Habitat 67, and has since refined this late Modernist manifesto into a balanced and moderated approach to designing public cultural spaces across the world. The AIA Gold Medal is the highest honor the AIA confers on an architect. It acknowledges an individual whose significant body of work has had a lasting influence on the theory and practice of architecture. Safdie will be honored at the AIA Convention 2015 in Atlanta.

AIA President Helene Combs Dreiling, FAIA, notified Safdie by telephone immediately after the Board made its decision. Safdie responded “This is very nice. It is a great honor and a particular honor because it is recognition from my peers. It is a vote of confidence in the values that have guided my architecture.

The middle path

”In his long and storied career, Safdie has forged a middle path between the opposing poles that have defined 20th-century architecture. He exploded into the design community fully formed (appropriately enough) in the middle of the 20th century with Habitat 67 for Expo 67, Montreal’s 1967 world’s fair. This series of 158 stacked and terraced apartments crystalized, for too short a moment, the enduring dreams of Modernist architects to produce modular mega-structural buildings that could fundamentally reshape how people live—all completed before Safdie’s 30th birthday.

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Mega-structure is a theme he would return to, but here and elsewhere Safdie balanced grand size and presence with a sense of warmth and invitation. While his architecture can be seen as iconic and monumental, it is also intensely intimate, comforting, and affirming. Habitat 67, for example, is massive: 354 concrete modules on a narrow peninsula near the confluence of the Ottawa and St. Lawrence rivers. But it’s human-scaled and neighborly, with flexible floor plans and rooftop gardens, its mass broken up and disguised by an idiosyncratic jumble of terraced units, demonstrating a granular urbanism of its own.

Perhaps his signature formal characteristic is an ability to walk a middle path between the use of organic curvilinear geometry and rectilinear grid-based forms. He is also a symbolist, investing narrative into his buildings and presaging prominent architects like Daniel Libeskind, AIA, who have turned emotional metaphor into a global design brand. But Safdie is also an architect content to let each singular combination of site, space, and materials speak for itself.

These oppositions are not equivocation. His self-assurance has allowed him to resist practicing in a narrowly prescribed signature style, and has made him an eminent architect the world over, and a national design treasure for three nations.

“Here we have the ideal architect:” wrote AIA Gold Medalist Kevin Roche, FAIA, in a letter of recommendation, “a responsible and sensitive creator, a solver of problems, a modest but brilliant artist, not as well-recognized or known as he should be, but an example for all architects.”

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Simple tools, extroadinary results

Born in Haifa in 1938, Safdie moved with his family to Montreal in 1953. He studied architecture at McGill University, and after graduation worked with AIA Gold Medalist Louis Kahn in Philadelphia, an influence that still shines through his work. He returned to Montreal to work on Habitat 67, and then began a series of teaching posts that culminated with his job as the director of the urban design program at the Harvard Graduate School of Design from 1978-84. Since 1978, Safdie has been based in Boston, but he is a citizen of Canada, the United States, and Israel, where he established a Jerusalem office in 1970.

Many of Safdie’s Asian and Middle Eastern projects exhibit a sense of timelessness closely associated with his mentor Kahn. Safdie once told Tablet Magazinethat if architecture is good, “then it will feel obvious, and like it’s always been there.” In Israel, his Mamilla Center blends in contextually and materially with a 19th-century Jerusalem neighborhood, offering people a stylish and contemporary urban shopping experience. In Punjab, India, his design for the Khalsa Heritage Centre, a museum of Sikh history and culture, shows visitors an elemental juxtaposition of stone and concrete with water. Opposite wings of the museum are separated by a footbridge over man-made pools, and the sculptural presence of the stone and concrete buildings, with the stillness of the water below, lends the site an air of ancient inevitability. The building is made up of a rich mix of orthogonal geometry and curvilinear forms, organic and flowing in some places, rigid and rational in others. This mixture alludes to the primeval determination the earliest builders felt when they conspired to put together posts, lintels, and right angles in defiant opposition to gravity and the natural world they struggled against.

Additional Credit

  • Engineer - MEP

    JFK&M Consulting

  • General Contractor

    GC Contractors, Inc.

  • Millwork

    Fine Design Custom Woodwork,Inc.

  • Table manufacturer

    Machineous

  • Lighting designer

    Horton Lees Brogden

    Lighting Design

Jury

  • Engineer - MEP

    JFK&M Consulting

  • General Contractor

    GC Contractors, Inc.

  • Millwork

    Fine Design Custom Woodwork,Inc.

  • Table manufacturer

    Machineous

  • Lighting designer

    Horton Lees Brogden

    Lighting Design

Image credits

Stephanie Lecocq

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Stephanie Lecocq

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Stephanie Lecocq

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Stephanie Lecocq

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