Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger yesterday announced his appointment of Amale Andraos as the next dean of the University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.

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.

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WORKac is interested in positing architecture at the intersection of the urban, the rural and the natural. They embrace reinvention and collaborate with other fields to rethink architecture ‘in the world.’ In the face of overwhelming challenges and increasingly normative scenarios, they remain stubborn in our commitment to imagine alternate scenarios for the future of cities. They appropriate the more productive aspects of the urban discourse – from density and compression, to appropriateness of scale, the expression of intelligent and shared infrastructures, and a more careful integration between architecture, landscape and ecological systems – to bear upon architecture as we find shared concerns across their global practice. They hold unshakable lightness and polemical optimism as a means to move beyond the projected and towards the possible, an ambition with which they approach every project.

Dan Wood, FAIA, LEED AP, leads international projects for WORKac ranging from masterplans to buildings across the United States as well as in Asia, Africa, and Europe. Wood holds the 2013-14 Louis I. Kahn Chair at the Yale School of Architecture and has taught at the Princeton University School of Architecture, the Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture at the Cooper Union, Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation, Ohio State University’s Knowlton School of Architecture, and the UC Berkeley School of Environmental Design, where he was the Friedman Distinguished Chair. Wood is originally from Rhode Island and lived in Paris and in the Netherlands for many years before moving to New York in 2002. He is a licensed architect in the State of New York and is LEED certified.

Amale Andraos is the dean of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. She has taught at numerous institutions including the Princeton University School of Architecture, the Harvard Graduate School of Design, the University of Pennsylvania Design School, and the American University in Beirut. Andraos is committed to research and publications. Her work has recently explored the question of representation by re-examining the concept of the ‘Arab City.’ Andraos was born in Beirut, Lebanon. She has lived in Saudi Arabia, France, Canada, and the Netherlands prior to moving to New York in 2002. She serves on the board of the Architectural League of New York, the Advisory Board of the Arab Center for Architecture in Beirut and is a member of the faculty steering committee for the Columbia Global Centers | Middle East.

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Published on: August 13, 2014
Cite: "Amale Andraos Appointed Dean of GSAPP" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/amale-andraos-appointed-dean-gsapp> ISSN 1139-6415
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