Stanley Tigerman on Learning from Mies, The Younger Generation and "Designing Bridges to Burn"

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This article was originally published on Autodesk's Redshift publication as "Inside My Design Mind: Salt-of-the-Earth Lessons From Architect Stanley Tigerman."

It’s no secret Stanley Tigerman has made a few enemies in his career. Chicago’s pugnacious 85-year-old architecture star and elder statesman, who received a lifetime achievement award from the American Institute of Architects in October, is known perhaps as much for his brand of gloves-off honesty as his buildings. In a 2013 interview with Chicago magazine, he summed up the redesign of the city’s Ludwig Mies van der Rohe–designed IBM tower as “shit.”

But there’s a socially minded, nurturing side of Tigerman—designer of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Pacific Garden Mission—that is sometimes lost in the offhand bravado of his public-facing comments. As a member of the Chicago Seven (which protested the predominance of modernism) and a provocateur who has organized seminal forums about architecture’s future, Tigerman is more than just tough talk.

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Cite: Jeff Link. "Stanley Tigerman on Learning from Mies, The Younger Generation and "Designing Bridges to Burn"" 09 Aug 2016. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/792986/stanley-tigerman-on-learning-from-mies-the-younger-generation-and-designing-bridges-to-burn> ISSN 0719-8884

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