European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture

The European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture - Mies van der Rohe Award is a prize given biennially by the European Union and the Fundació Mies van der Rohe, Barcelona,[1] 'to acknowledge and reward quality architectural production in Europe'.

The Prize was created in 1987 through an equal partnership among the European Commission, the European Parliament and the Fundació Mies van der Rohe. The award is open to all the works completed in Europe within the two-year period before the granting of the prize. Nominations are submitted by independent experts, the national architecture associations and the advisory committee of the Prize, and then evaluated by a jury organized for each cycle. The five finalist works are visited by the jury, which chooses a prize winner and names an Emerging Architect winner.

As of 2016, a new category, the Young Talent Architecture Award (YTAA), highlights the final degree projects of recently graduated architects, landscape architects and urban designers. YTAA, as an inherent part of the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture – Mies van der Rohe Award, is organised by the Fundació Mies van der Rohe with the support of the Creative Europe programme of the European Union. YTAA is organised in partnership with the European Association for Architectural Education (EAAE) and the Architects’ Council of Europe (ACE-CAE); World Architects as a founding partner; the European Cultural Centre as a partner in Venice; sponsored by Jung, Jansen and Regent; and with the support of USM.[2]


List of award winners

Year Architect(s) Winning Building Location
1988 Alvaro Siza Banco Borges e Irmão Vila do Conde
1990 Sir Norman Foster New Stansted Airport Terminal London
1992 Esteve Bonell and Francesc Rius Municipal Sports Stadium Badalona, Barcelona
1994 Nicholas Grimshaw Waterloo International railway station London
1996 Dominique Perrault Bibliothèque Nationale de France Paris
1998 Peter Zumthor Kunsthaus Bregenz Bregenz
2001 Rafael Moneo Kursaal Centre San Sebastián
2003 Zaha Hadid Car Park and Terminus Hoenheim North Hoenheim, Strasbourg
2005 Rem Koolhaas Netherlands Embassy Berlin Berlin
2007 Mansilla+Tuñón Arquitectos Contemporary Art Museum of Castilla y León León
2009 Snøhetta Norwegian National Opera and Ballet Oslo
2011 David Chipperfield Neues Museum[3] Berlin
2013 Henning Larsen Architects and Studio Olafur Eliasson Harpa concert hall[4] Reykjavík
2015 Barozzi Veiga Szczecin Philharmonic Hall[5] Szczecin
2017 NL Architects and XVW architectuur DeFlat Kleiburg Amsterdam
2019 Lacaton & Vassal Architectes Transformation of 530 dwellings — Grand Parc Bordeaux Bordeaux

List of Emerging Architect Special Mention

Year Architect(s) Building Location
2001 Florian Nagler Kaufmann Holz AG Center of distribution Bobingen
2003 Jürgen Mayer H. Stadthaus Scharnhauser Park Ostfildern
2005 NL Architects BasketBar Utrecht
2007 Bevk Perovic arhitekti Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Physics and Mathematics Liubliana
2009 Studio UP Gymnasium 46° 09' N / 16° 50' E Koprivnica
2011 Bosch.Capdeferro Arquitectures Collage House Girona
2013 Langarita-Navarro Architects Red Bull Music Academy Madrid
2015 ARQUITECTURA-G Casa Luz Cilleros
2017 MSA and V+ NAVEZ - 5 social units as Northern entrance of Brussels Brussels

See also

  • List of architecture prizes

References

  1. Mies Arch Archived 2010-01-25 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 25 March 2010
  2. "Young Talent Architecture Award 2020 Breaks Ground" 27 Nov 2019. ArchDaily. Accessed 30 Apr 2020. <https://www.archdaily.com/929164/young-talent-architecture-award-2020-breaks-ground/> ISSN 0719-8884
  3. European Commission, 18 April 2011
  4. European Commission, 30 April 2013
  5. , 9 May 2015
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.