British architect
Jamie Fobert
Born (1962-11-05 ) 5 November 1962 (age 62) Nationality British Alma mater University of Toronto Occupation Architect Practice Jamie Fobert Architects Buildings
James Earl Fobert , CBE (born November 5, 1962) is a British architect and designer.
Career
Jamie Fobert studied architecture in his native Canada, at the University of Toronto .[ 1] He arrived in London in 1988[ 2] and was employed for eight years at David Chipperfield Architects.[ 3] During that time, he worked on a house for Nick Knight .[ 4] In 1996, he established his own practice, Jamie Fobert Architects.[ 5]
Since then, his work has ranged from individual houses to retail, including Givenchy and Versace , and significant public buildings for the arts.[ 6] His practice has won a number of public commissions for cultural organizations including Tate St Ives [ 7] and Kettle's Yard [ 8] and the National Portrait Gallery, London .[ 9] [ 10]
He is a Trustee of the Camden Arts Centre [ 11] and The Architecture Foundation .[ 12] He was appointed CBE in the 2020 New Year Honours , for services to architecture.[ 13]
Awards
Jamie Fobert Architects has won awards including several RIBA Awards. In 2018, Tate St Ives was awarded the Art Fund Museum of the Year [ 14] and was shortlisted for the RIBA Stirling Prize .[ 15] In 2019, the practice won the BD Architect of the Year Award,[ 16] in recognition of an outstanding body of work in the field of public buildings.
References
^ "Head space: Architect Jamie Fobert" . The Independent . 2 May 2008. Retrieved 21 November 2019 .
^ Landau, Jack (17 November 2015). "U of T Daniels Lecture: Jamie Fobert "Working in Architecture" " . UrbanToronto . Retrieved 21 November 2019 .
^ Ashenburg, Katherine (9 June 2019). "Meet Canada's undercover starchitect, Jamie Fobert, who's set to transform Britain's National Portrait Gallery" . The Globe and Mail . Retrieved 21 November 2019 .
^ Glancey, Johnathan (2 December 2004). "Concrete achievements" . The Guardian . Retrieved 21 November 2019 .
^ Long, Kieran (September 2003). "Jamie Fobert" . Icon (architecture magazine) . Retrieved 21 November 2019 . [permanent dead link ]
^ Bernstein, Fred (28 March 2018). "See How One of Britain's Rising-Star Architects Works Magic in Impossible Sites" . Architectural Digest . Retrieved 21 November 2019 .
^ "The new Tate St Ives opens – Press Release" . Tate .
^ "Jamie Fobert on the new Kettle's Yard" . Kettle's Yard . 9 February 2018.
^ "This architect is remodelling the National Portrait Gallery" . Evening Standard . 22 February 2018.
^ "National Portrait Gallery, Westminster" . The RIBA Journal . 10 May 2024. Retrieved 19 August 2024 .
^ "Contact" .
^ Allford, Simon. "The Architecture Foundation Board of Trustees | Architecture Foundation" . www.architecturefoundation.org.uk . Archived from the original on 22 December 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2019 .
^ https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/856352/New_Year_Honours_List_2020.pdf [bare URL PDF ]
^ "Museum of the Year 2019" . Art Fund .
^ Wilson, Rob (October 2018). "RIBA Stirling Prize 2018: Tate St Ives by Jamie Fobert Architects" . Architects Journal .
^ "Jamie Fobert crowned Architect of the Year" . Building Design .
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