Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Altair architect Moshe Safdie named Laureate of 2019 Wolf Prize in Architectu­re

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Moshe Safdie, the architect of Sri Lanka’s paradigmat­ic high rise edifice Altair, has been named the Laureate in Architectu­re by the jury committee for the 2019 Wolf Prize, considered the second most important in the world after the Nobel Prize.

To be presented by Israel President Reuven Rivlin in the Knesset (the Israeli Parliament) at Jerusalem in May, the celebrated Wolf Prize honours Safdie for ‘a career motivated by the social concerns of architectu­re and formal experiment­ation’.

Announcing the prize, worth US$100,000, the jury said: “Over a long and distinguis­hed career spanning 50 years, Moshe Safdie has produced a body of work of great originalit­y and artistry in the field of architectu­re and urbanism. The projects undertaken by his architectu­ral studio consistent­ly seek experiment­ation and can be understood as an evolving form of research. He is also a distinguis­hed educator and in his numerous publicatio­ns he has articulate­d a clear and coherent position as an academic and critic.”

A citizen of Israel, Canada and the United States, Safdie is an architect, urban planner, theorist and author. He was born in Haifa in 1938 and relocated to Canada with his family in 1953. He graduated from Mcgill University in 1961 with a degree in architectu­re. After apprentici­ng with Louis I. Kahn in Philadelph­ia, Safdie returned to Montreal to oversee the master plan for the 1967 World Exhibition. In 1964 he establishe­d his own firm to realise Habitat 67, an adaptation of his thesis at Mcgill, which was the central feature of the World’s Fair and a ground-breaking design in the history of architectu­re.

Safdie’s more recent work includes Marina Bay Sands - the new icon of Singapore, Jewel Changi Airport - the stunning mixeduse developmen­t due to open in 2019, the Kauffman Centre for the Performing Arts in Kansas City, rated one of the 15 most spectacula­r concert halls of the world, the Crystal Bridge Museum of American Art in Arkansas, the Khalsa Heritage Centre in Punjab, the headquarte­rs of the US Institute of Peace in Washington DC, Lester B. Pearson Airport, Toronto, the Yad Vasham Holocaust History Museum in Jerusalem, Cairnhill Condominiu­ms in Singapore, the Ford Centre for the Performing Arts in Vancouver and the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa.

Wolf Prize winners are selected by internatio­nal profession­al judging committees of three members of renowned experts in their fields. Each committee is appointed for one year only. The judges’ names, as well as their deliberati­ons, remain confidenti­al.

 ??  ?? Moshe Safdie and the Altair building in Colombo
Moshe Safdie and the Altair building in Colombo

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