SANAA

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Kitagata Housing project by SANAA
Zollverein School of Management and Design (Essen/Germany) by SANAA
Christian Dior building, Omotesandō
Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, 2009
EPFL Learning Centre, Lausanne
(Switzerland).
De Kunstlinie Theater & Cultural Center, Almere (The Netherlands)

SANAA (Sejima and Nishizawa and Associates) is an architectural firm based in

Bocconi New Campus in Milan
.

History

Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa founded SANAA in 1995. They later won the Golden Lion in 2004 for the most significant work in the Ninth International Architecture Exhibition of the

Pritzker Prize, which made Sejima the second woman to win this prize.[3]

Grace Farms Interior, with floor to ceiling windows.

Projects

Australia

  • The Art Gallery of New South Wales, North Building - 2022
  • The Museum of Contemporary Art (Not Built/Project Only) - 1997 to 1999 - Sydney, Australia

China

  • House for the CIPEA (China International Practical Exhibition of Architecture) - 2004 to Present - Nanjing, China

England

France

Germany

Japan

  • Multimedia Studio - 1995 to 1996 -
    Gifu
    , Japan
  • N Museum - 1995 to 1997 -
    Wakayama, Japan
  • O Museum - 1995 to 1999 - Nagano, Japan
  • S House - 1995 to 1996 - Okayama, Japan
  • M House - 1996 to 1997 - Tokyo, Japan
  • K Office Building - 1996 to 1997 - Ibaraki, Japan
  • Koga Park Café - 1997 to 1998 - Ibaraki, Japan
  • Welfare Center - 1997 -
    Kanagawa
    , Japan
  • Kanazawa, Ishikawa
    , Japan
  • Dior Omotesando Store - 2001 to 2003 - Tokyo, Japan
  • Issey Miyake Store by Naoki Takizawa - 2003 - Tokyo, Japan
  • Naoshima Ferry Terminal - 2003 to 2006 - Kagawa
    , Japan

Netherlands

Italy

Spain

  • Extension to the Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno - 2002 to Present -
    Valencia, Spain

Switzerland

Taiwan

United States

Awards

SANAA's work was included in the exhibition City of Girls in the Japanese Pavilion at the 2000

Pritzker Prize, the highest of honours in architecture.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Pritzker Prize 2010 Laureates, retrieved 29 March 2010
  2. ^ "Venice Architecture Biennial 2004 Awards". Architecture Viva.
  3. ^ Nonie Niesewand (March 2015). "Through the Glass Ceiling". Architectural Digest.

References


External links

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