Margaret Helfand

Margaret Helfand

Margaret Helfand (born June 26, 1947, Pasadena, California – died June 20, 2007, New York City, New York) was a Manhattan-based New York architect and urban planner who served as president of the New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects.

Contents

Career

Margaret Helfand was a Manhattan architect and urban planner who has been recognized worldwide for her innovative approach to design of institutional buildings, interiors, and college campuses. Her designs emphasize clean elemental forms, the use of natural materials and the integration of her buildings with the surrounding landscape. Ms. Helfand spent the bulk of her career practicing at her own firm, Helfand Architecture, founded in 1981. Breaking through gender typecasting which often relegates female architects to designing houses and interiors, she executed many large-scale institutional and commercial works. Her firm's designs won many awards and her work is honored in a monograph published in 1999 by Monacelli Press.

Ms. Helfand was elected to the College of Fellows by the American Institute of Architects in 1998. She was recipient of the 2002 Rome Prize in Architecture. She helped create the Center for Architecture, a hub for exhibitions in the field and the home of the New York chapter of the institute. She was a co-chairman of New York New Visions, a civic group that advised government agencies on urban design and planning guidelines for the redevelopment of Lower Manhattan after the destruction of the World Trade Center.

Education

She received her B.A. at Swarthmore College and M.Arch from University of California - Berkeley.

Death

She died, six days before her 60th birthday, in 2007 from complications of colon cancer.

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