The Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Architecture is presented for notable achievement in design or for distinguished contributions to the field of architecture. The award has been given every year since the establishment of the foundation in 1966. The award is granted jointly by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation and the University of Virginia School of Architecture. Along with the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Law and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Public Citizenry, the awards are the highest outside honors offered by the University, which does not grant honorary degrees. Its recipients are not required to be architects.[1]
Recipients
Year |
Name |
Country |
2015 |
Herman Hertzberger |
Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
2014 |
Toyo Ito |
Tokyo, Japan |
2013 |
Laurie Olin |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
2012 |
Rafael Moneo |
Tudela, Navarre, Spain |
2011 |
Maya Lin |
New York, New York |
2010 |
Edward O. Wilson |
Cambridge, Massachusetts |
2009 |
Robert Irwin |
San Diego, California |
2008 |
Gro Harlem Brundtland |
Oslo, Norway |
2007 |
Zaha Hadid |
Baghdad, Iraq |
2006 |
Peter Zumthor |
Haldenstein, Switzerland |
2005 |
Shigeru Ban |
Tokyo, Japan |
2004 |
Peter Walker |
Berkeley, California |
2003 |
Tod Williams and Billie Tsien |
New York, New York |
2002 |
James Turrell |
Flagstaff, Arizona |
2001 |
Glenn Murcutt |
Sydney, Australia |
2000 |
Daniel Patrick Moynihan |
New York, New York |
1999 |
Richard Rogers |
London, England |
1998 |
Jaquelin T. Robertson |
New York, New York |
1997 |
Jaime Lerner |
Curitiba, Brazil |
1996 |
Jane Jacobs |
Toronto, Canada |
1995 |
Ian McHarg |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
1994 |
Frank O. Gehry |
Los Angeles, California |
1993 |
Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk and Andres Duany |
Miami, Florida |
1992 |
Aldo Rossi |
Milan, Italy |
1991 |
John V. Lindsay |
New York, New York |
1990 |
Fumihiko Maki |
Tokyo, Japan |
1989 |
Paul Mellon |
Upperville, Virginia |
1988 |
Romaldo Giurgola |
New York, New York |
1987 |
Dan Kiley |
Charlotte, Vermont |
1986 |
James Stirling |
London, England |
1985 |
Leon Krier |
London, England |
1984 |
H. H. Aga Khan |
Gouvieux, France |
1983 |
Robert Venturi |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
1982 |
Vincent J. Scully |
New Haven, Connecticut |
1981 |
Edward Larrabee Barnes |
New York, New York |
1980 |
Hugh A. Stubbins |
Cambridge, Massachusetts |
1979 |
Lawrence Halprin |
San Francisco, California |
1978 |
Philip Johnson |
New York, New York |
1977 |
Ada Louise Huxtable |
New York, New York |
1976 |
I. M. Pei |
New York, New York |
1975 |
Sir Nikolaus Pevsner |
London, England |
1974 |
Frei Otto |
Warmbronn, West Germany |
1973 |
Jean Labatut |
Princeton, New Jersey |
1972 |
Lewis Mumford |
Amenia, New York |
1971 |
Josep Lluis Sert |
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain |
1970 |
Kenzo Tange |
Tokyo, Japan |
1969 |
John Ely Burchard |
Boston, Massachusetts |
1968 |
Marcel Breuer |
New York, New York |
1967 |
Alvar Aalto |
Helsinki, Finland |
1966 |
Mies Van Der Rohe |
Chicago, Illinois |
[1]
Bibliography
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References
External links
http://www.arch.virginia.edu/faculty/visiting/jeffersonmedal/