Looking back over his long career, architect Moshe Safdie delves into four of his design projects and explains how he labored to make each one truly unique for its site and its users.
Moshe Safdie‘s master’s thesis quickly became a cult building: his modular “Habitat” apartments for Montreal Expo ’67. Within a dizzying pile of concrete, each apartment was carefully sited to have natural light and a tiny, private outdoor space for gardening. These themes have carried forward throughout Safdie’s career — his buildings tend to soak in the light, and to hold cozy, user-friendly spaces inside larger gestures.
He’s a triple citizen of Canada, Israel and the United States, three places where the bulk of his buildings can be found: in Canada, the National Gallery in Ottawa, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the Vancouver public library. For Yad Vashem, the Holocaust museum in Jerusalem, he designed the Children’s Memorial and the Memorial to the Deportees; he’s also built airport terminals in Tel Aviv. In the US, he designed the elegant and understated Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts, and under construction now is the Crystal Bridges Museum in Arkansas, set to open in 2010.