GUY NORDENSON [Recent Lecture]
Thu Oct 16, 6pm @ EMPAC:
GUY NORDENSON: “READING STRUCTURES”
Recognized for his independent research and innovative, collaborative work with architects, Guy Nordenson, principal of the New York firm Guy Nordenson and Associates, is a structural engineer and professor of architecture and structural engineering at Princeton University. He began his career as a draftsman in the joint studio of R. Buckminster Fuller and Isamu Noguchi, and has practiced structural engineering since 1978. In 1987 Nordenson established the New York office of Ove Arup & Partners, serving as its director until 1997, when he began independent practice.
The structural engineer for over one hundred projects worldwide, Nordenson has worked on the Museum of Modern Art expansion in New York, the Jubilee Church in Rome, the Simmons Residence Hall at MIT, the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City. Current projects include the expansion of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, and the Menil Drawing Center in Houston.
Nordenson’s research has included earthquake engineering, including code development, technology transfer, and long-range planning for FEMA and the USGS. He led the development of the New York City Seismic Code from 1984 to its enactment into law in 1995. His research project “On the Water | Palisade Bay”
More recently Nordenson has been engaged in climate adaptation and flood hazards mitigation research, working to improve the resilience of New York as a member of committees and task forces including the New York State 2100 Commission and as director of the newly formed Jamaica Bay–Rockaway Parks Conservancy. His research team at Princeton was recently awarded a major grant by the Rockefeller Foundation to develop “New Directions in Coastal Resilient Design Strategies” in collaboration with the Army Corps of Engineers and coordinating teams from Harvard, City College of New York, and University of Pennsylvania.
http://www.nordenson.com/home.php
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