Foster and Partners

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Image:F+P office.JPG
London Foster + Partners studio

Foster and Partners is a leading firm of architects in the United Kingdom. The practice is strongly associated with its founder, Norman Foster, now Lord Foster, and has constructed many high profile glass and steel, high-tech buildings around the world. In particular they are known for their design of airport buildings.

Established by Norman Foster as Foster Associates in 1967 shortly after leaving Team 4, the firm was renamed 'Foster and Partners' in the 1990s to more accurately reflect the influence of the other lead architects.

Contents

[edit] Selected projects

Major projects, by year of completion are:

Image:British Museum Great Court roof.jpg
The tessellated glass roof of the British Museum's Great Court redevelopment has a complex curved form, approximating the top half of a doughnut anchored by the circular Reading Room at the centre of the court.
Image:Wembley stadium040307.jpg
The new Wembley Stadium in London: perhaps one of the most controversial projects that Foster and Partners have been involved in. The design was unveiled in 1999, with an iconic "tiara" crowning the main stadia as its most distinguishable feature, but numerous delays meant the stadium did not open until 2007.
Image:30-St-Mary-Axe.jpg
30 St Mary Axe, one of London's most popular new buildings, towers above its neighbours.

[edit] Awards

RIBA Stirling Prize

1998 Imperial War Museum Duxford, Duxford

2004 Swiss Re Building, 30 St Mary Axe, The Gherkin

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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