Ian RitchieCBERA (born 24 June 1947) is a British architect who founded
Ian Ritchie Architects in 1981. His projects include the
RIBA Award-winning Susie Sainsbury Theatre and Angela Burgess Recital Hall for the
Royal Academy of Music,[2] Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour, University College London[3] and the
American Institute of Architects Award-winning
Royal Shakespeare CompanyCourtyard Theatre. Ritchie was the first foreign architect to receive the French Academie d'Architecture Grand Silver Medal for Innovation.[4]
Career
Born in
Sussex, England, Ritchie graduated from
Liverpool John Moores University School of Architecture in 1968. He went on to research Urban Studies for a year in Oita-Osaka, Japan and graduated with a Diploma in Architecture with Distinction from PCL, London (now
University of Westminster) in 1972.[4] After working with
Norman Foster (1972–76), Ritchie spent two years in France designing and constructing projects before joining Arup's Lightweight Structures Group.[5][6] (1978–81) In 1979, he founded Chrysalis Architects (1979–81) with Alan Stanton and Mike Davies.[7][8] In 1981, he created
Ian Ritchie Architects in London, and co-founded the design engineering firm Rice Francis Ritchie (
RFR) with
Peter Rice and Martin Francis in Paris.[9] Before he left RFR in 1990, the practice had been responsible for major projects in Paris including the Bioclimatic Facades at La Villette Cité des Sciences and the Louvre Pyramids and Sculpture Courts with I M Pei.[10][11][12] Alongside his work at Ian Ritchie Architects, Ritchie has held numerous public and professional appointments relating to his public policy interests in pan-disciplinary and environmentally intelligent design. He has acted in an advisory and teaching capacity to government, universities and charitable trusts, and regularly lectures on topics including art, urbanism and regeneration at venues worldwide.[13] Among other accolades, Ritchie was awarded a
CBE in 2000, and was elected a
Royal Academician in 1998 and Professor of Architecture at the RA Schools in 2004.[4] Ritchie (and
Ian Ritchie Architects) have received over 80 national and international award nominations and have been shortlisted four times for the
RIBA Stirling Prize and
EU Mies Award.[14] Ritchie is an elected member of the Akademie der Künste, Berlin.[15]
Major architectural projects
In 1999, Ian Ritchie Architects (alongside Scottish Homes and Thenew Housing Association) completed Scotland's Home of Tomorrow - new social housing for Glasgow's East End[16]
Image
Project
Awards and nominations
Reina Sofia Museum of Modern Art
Madrid, Spain
Completed 1990 (with Onzono/Castro)[17]
Louvre Museum Inverted Pyramid
Paris, France
Completed 1993 (with I.M. Pei and RFR)[18]
Leipzig Messe Glass Hall
Germany
Completed 1995 (with gmp)[19]
^Brown, André (2001). The Engineer's Contribution to Contemporary Architecture: Peter Rice. London: Thomas Telford Publishing. pp. 61, 62, 67, 68, 69, 70.
ISBN0-7277-2770-2.
^Fiero, Annette (2003). The Glass State: The Technology of the Spectacle Paris 1981-1998. Massachusetts, London: The MIT Press. pp. 153, 154.
ISBN9780262562218.
^Lomholt, Isabelle (11 February 2012).
"Ian Ritchie Architects". e-architect. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
Ian RitchieCBERA (born 24 June 1947) is a British architect who founded
Ian Ritchie Architects in 1981. His projects include the
RIBA Award-winning Susie Sainsbury Theatre and Angela Burgess Recital Hall for the
Royal Academy of Music,[2] Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour, University College London[3] and the
American Institute of Architects Award-winning
Royal Shakespeare CompanyCourtyard Theatre. Ritchie was the first foreign architect to receive the French Academie d'Architecture Grand Silver Medal for Innovation.[4]
Career
Born in
Sussex, England, Ritchie graduated from
Liverpool John Moores University School of Architecture in 1968. He went on to research Urban Studies for a year in Oita-Osaka, Japan and graduated with a Diploma in Architecture with Distinction from PCL, London (now
University of Westminster) in 1972.[4] After working with
Norman Foster (1972–76), Ritchie spent two years in France designing and constructing projects before joining Arup's Lightweight Structures Group.[5][6] (1978–81) In 1979, he founded Chrysalis Architects (1979–81) with Alan Stanton and Mike Davies.[7][8] In 1981, he created
Ian Ritchie Architects in London, and co-founded the design engineering firm Rice Francis Ritchie (
RFR) with
Peter Rice and Martin Francis in Paris.[9] Before he left RFR in 1990, the practice had been responsible for major projects in Paris including the Bioclimatic Facades at La Villette Cité des Sciences and the Louvre Pyramids and Sculpture Courts with I M Pei.[10][11][12] Alongside his work at Ian Ritchie Architects, Ritchie has held numerous public and professional appointments relating to his public policy interests in pan-disciplinary and environmentally intelligent design. He has acted in an advisory and teaching capacity to government, universities and charitable trusts, and regularly lectures on topics including art, urbanism and regeneration at venues worldwide.[13] Among other accolades, Ritchie was awarded a
CBE in 2000, and was elected a
Royal Academician in 1998 and Professor of Architecture at the RA Schools in 2004.[4] Ritchie (and
Ian Ritchie Architects) have received over 80 national and international award nominations and have been shortlisted four times for the
RIBA Stirling Prize and
EU Mies Award.[14] Ritchie is an elected member of the Akademie der Künste, Berlin.[15]
Major architectural projects
In 1999, Ian Ritchie Architects (alongside Scottish Homes and Thenew Housing Association) completed Scotland's Home of Tomorrow - new social housing for Glasgow's East End[16]
Image
Project
Awards and nominations
Reina Sofia Museum of Modern Art
Madrid, Spain
Completed 1990 (with Onzono/Castro)[17]
Louvre Museum Inverted Pyramid
Paris, France
Completed 1993 (with I.M. Pei and RFR)[18]
Leipzig Messe Glass Hall
Germany
Completed 1995 (with gmp)[19]
^Brown, André (2001). The Engineer's Contribution to Contemporary Architecture: Peter Rice. London: Thomas Telford Publishing. pp. 61, 62, 67, 68, 69, 70.
ISBN0-7277-2770-2.
^Fiero, Annette (2003). The Glass State: The Technology of the Spectacle Paris 1981-1998. Massachusetts, London: The MIT Press. pp. 153, 154.
ISBN9780262562218.
^Lomholt, Isabelle (11 February 2012).
"Ian Ritchie Architects". e-architect. Retrieved 8 February 2019.