Andraos will become the new dean on September 1, and will succeed Mark Wigley, who announced he would retire at the end of the 2013-2014 academic year in September 2013 after holding the position for nine years.
She is a New York-based architect, a principal at WORKac and an associate professor of architecture, planning and preservation at GSAPP since 2011 and she has overseen a number of projects, including the Children’s Museum for the Arts in Manhattan, the Blaffer Museum in Houston, and the master plans for seven college campuses in China, according to the release. She was presented at Wall Street Journal article as part "Architect Rem Koolhaas's Protégés".
Andraos was born in Beirut, Lebanon, and has lived in Saudi Arabia, France, Canada and the Netherlands. She holds degrees from McGill University School of Architecture in Montreal and the Graduate School of Design at Harvard. A veteran of several design juries and international competitions, she serves on the advisory board of the Arab Center for Architecture, the board of the Architectural League of New York and the steering committee of Columbia Global Centers, Middle East. Andraos, previously, taught at Princeton, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, Parsons School of Design, New York Institute of Technology, Ohio State’s Knowlton School of Architecture and the American University of Beirut. Before cofounding WORKac in 2003, she worked with Rem Koolhaas in his Rotterdam and New York offices.
“Columbia is already a leader in addressing the challenges of high-speed urbanization around the globe and I believe it can lead in recasting architecture in dialogue with our urban societies and the natural environment,” said Andraos. “This is a School whose creativity and diversity of global perspectives makes it an ideal place to consider these large issues and ideas, and I am honored by the opportunity to continue and expand on work that Mark Wigley has done in welcoming people like me to the conversation.”
She and her partner are the recipients of numerous honours including eight AIA Design Awards, a New York Design Commission award and two MASterwork Awards from the Municipal Art Society of New York. Andraos’s husband and partner in WORKac, Dan Wood, earned his architecture degree at Columbia.