Morris Adjmi Architects

Morris Adjmi Architects
Practice information
Partners Morris Adjmi
Founded 1997
Location New York
Significant works and honors
Buildings

Morris Adjmi Architects is a New York City based architecture and interior design firm that provides design services to corporate, commercial and residential clients.

Background

Morris Adjmi is a member of the American Institute of Architects and the founder and principal of Morris Adjmi Architects. He began his career after obtaining his Masters of Architecture degree from Tulane University. In 1981 he began working with the Italian architect Aldo Rossi and in 1986 the two jointly opened the Studio di Architettura in New York City.[1] They collaborated on numerous international projects including the Hotel Il Palazzo in Fukuoka, Japan, Disney’s Celebration Office Complex in Orlando, Florida, the ABC Headquarters in Burbank, and the Scholastic Headquarters in New York City.

Adjmi established his own design firm in 1997 after a successful ten-year partnership with Rossi. Morris Adjmi Architects, which also goes by the 'MA', has developed an identity as an office that creates architecture composed of clear contemporary forms that are inspired by context and history. As a matter of process, MA focuses on being site specific and relating to the specific context of a site and its surrounding buildings, both now and historically. Their attempt is to recognize the elements or essence of what makes a space unique, and channel that element through their architecture.

Design Style

Adjmi’s background also contributes to his design sensibility. Growing up in New Orleans, he learned an appreciation for historic architecture and a reverence for history, but also an interest in continuing the spirit of architecture and not necessarily mimicking the exact style and details.

Adjmi's work comprises modern structures incorporating contextual and historic elements.[2] His newest projects attempt to rethink the traditional uses of materials in a way that matches his design aesthetic. Also incorporated into their design is a deep rooting in sustainability, which is evident in their use of design elements such as green roofs, living walls, and adhering to LEED guidelines.

Projects

MA's work, which mainly focuses on New York City based projects, includes commercial, office, and residential buildings primarily in Manhattan and Brooklyn. The firm recently completed two buildings for the NYU School of Law, one of which included the restoration of the historic Provincetown Playhouse. The firm also has several projects based in the Historic Gansevoort Market District, including a building that sits directly over the new High Line Park just as it intersects 14th Street. Other built work in Manhattan include buildings in Tribeca, SoHo, and the Ladies' Mile Historic District.

The office has also completed a number of commercial buildings and hotels in Florida (see Celebration, FL), as well as private residences in the Bahamas (see Albany, New Providence) .

MA designed the masterplan for the development of Washington D.C.'s Shaw neighborhood by developer JBG.[3]

MA's work has been covered in numerous publications, and Adjmi has edited two books on Aldo Rossi.

MA is designing two new buildings in Chicago's West Loop neighborhood, both in execution with GREC Architects.[4] One building will be a boutique hotel at 200 West Lake Street [5] and a multi-family residential building at 1035 West Van Buren.[6]

Selected Projects

References

  1. Iovine, Julie V. (5 September 1997). "Aldo Rossi, Architect of Monumental Simplicity, Dies at 66". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  2. , Real Estate Weekly Online, 29 November 2014. Retrieved on 4 December 2014.
  3. Meyer, Eugene (1 December 2015). "Washington's Shaw Neighborhood Is Remade for Young Urbanites". New York Times. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  4. "GREC Architects".
  5. "Curbed Chicago Booming Fulton Market Area to Get One More Hotel Project".
  6. "Curbed Chicago West Loop Tower May Be First Highrise Construction of 2016".
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