IAAC Lecture Series 2015/16
Tuesday 1st of March 2016
Reinier de Graaf
OMA/AMO
@ 19.30, IAAC Auditorium
Open to the Public
IAAC Lecture Series 2015/16
Tuesday 1st of March 2016
Reinier de Graaf
OMA/AMO
@ 19.30, IAAC Auditorium
Open to the Public
Reinier de Graaf joined OMA in 1996. He is responsible for building and master-planning projects in Europe, Russia, and the Middle East, including the new Timmerhuis in Rotterdam (completed 2015), G-Star Headquarters in Amsterdam (completed 2014), De Rotterdam (completed 2013), the Norra Tornen residential towers in Stockholm, and the Commonwealth Institute (under construction) in London.
In 2002, he became director of AMO, the think tank of OMA, and produced The Image of Europe, an exhibition illustrating the history of the European Union. He has overseen AMO’s increasing involvement in sustainability and energy planning, including Zeekracht: a strategic masterplan for the North Sea; the publication in 2010 of Roadmap 2050: A Practical Guide to a Prosperous, Low-Carbon Europe with the European Climate Foundation; and The Energy Report, a global plan for 100 percent renewable energy by 2050, with the WWF.
De Graaf has recently worked extensively in Moscow, overseeing OMA’s proposal to design the masterplan for the Skolkovo Centre for Innovation, the ‘Russian Silicon Valley,’ and leading a consortium which proposed a development concept for the Moscow Agglomeration: an urban plan for Greater Moscow. He recently curated two exhibitions, On Hold at the British School in Rome in 2011 and Public Works: Architecture by Civil Servants (Venice Biennale, 2012; Berlin, 2013).
Telecom companies writing city manifiestos as architects used to do #smartcity #oma @reinierdeg @IAAC pic.twitter.com/vcicAYxI7Y
— Areti Markopoulou (@AretiMark) 1 de marzo de 2016
Calling a #City #Smart means that everything has been done before is #Dumb? @reinierdeg #Now @IAAC pic.twitter.com/O6yOFWCiZa
— IaaC (@IAAC) 1 de marzo de 2016
In 2020 65% of the world's population work in the shadow economy, accounting for 15% of global GDP. #AMO @reinierdeg pic.twitter.com/kHyF7UiNrj
— IaaC (@IAAC) 1 de marzo de 2016