The Driehaus Architecture Prize, fully named The Richard H. Driehaus Prize at the University of Notre Dame, is a global award to honor a major contributor in the field of contemporary traditional and classical architecture. The Driehaus Prize was conceived as an alternative to the predominantly modernist Pritzker Prize.

It was co-founded by fund manager and philanthropist Richard Driehaus and Dean of the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture Michael Lykoudis and was established in 2003 by the Richard H. Driehaus Charitable Lead Trust. It is presented annually through the School of Architecture at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, United States, which teaches a classical approach to architecture.

The jury also awards the Henry Hope Reed Award (given in conjunction with the Driehaus Prize) to an individual working outside the practice of architecture, who has supported the cultivation of the traditional city, its architecture and art through writing, planning or promotion. The 2020 Reed Award was given to Clem Labine, the creator of the Palladio Award, which recognizes excellence in traditional design, and the eponymous Clem Labine Award for creating more humane and beautiful environments.

Award

The Driehaus Prize is awarded to a living architect whose work embodies the principles of traditional and classical architecture and urbanism in contemporary society, and reflects what the jury considers positive cultural, environmental and artistic impacts. The award itself is a bronze miniature of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, known as the first use of the Corinthian order on the outside of a building. The award includes a monetary prize of US$200,000.

The award jury annually selects an architect who has greatly influenced the field of traditional and classical architecture. The jury travels together to a city of architectural significance, exploring it together, and taking the city's urban fabric as a backdrop for its deliberations.

The jury has included notable architects and educators such as Adele Chatfield-Taylor (since 2004, President Emerita of the American Academy in Rome), Robert S. Davis (since 2009, developer and co-founder of Seaside, Florida), Paul Goldberger (since 2006, former architecture critic for The New Yorker), Léon Krier (since 2005, inaugural Driehaus Prize recipient), Witold Rybczynski (since 2011, architecture critic and professor of urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania), Demetri Porphyrios (since 2013, is a Greek architect and author who practices architecture in London as principal of the firm Porphyrios Associates), and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk (since 2017, founder of DPZ).

In 2012, the then Charles, Prince of Wales (current King Charles III) accepted The Richard H. Driehaus Prize at the University of Notre Dame Patronage Award during a ceremony Jan. 27 at St James's Palace in London.

History

Driehaus, the founder, chief investment officer and chairman of Driehaus Capital Management in Chicago, established the award program through Notre Dame in 2003 because of its reputation as a national leader in incorporating the ideals of traditional and classical architecture into the task of modern urban development. In 2007, Driehaus announced that he would increase the prize monies given out annually through the Driehaus Prize and the Reed Award to a combined $250,000. The two prizes represent the most significant recognition for classicism in the contemporary built environment.

Driehaus, the founder, chief investment officer and chairman of Driehaus Capital Management in Chicago, co-founded the award program in 2003 with Michael Lykoudis, who at the time was the Dean of the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture. Driehaus collaborated with Dean Lykoudis, who organized and chaired the jury, to recognize those practitioners and scholars who made seminal contributions to modern traditional architecture and urbanism. Dreihaus chose to work with the University of Notre Dame because of its reputation as a national leader in incorporating the ideals of traditional and classical architecture into the task of modern urban development. In 2007, Driehaus announced that he would increase the prize monies given out annually through the Driehaus Prize and the Reed Award to a combined $250,000. The two prizes represent the most significant recognition for classicism in the contemporary built environment.

The oil painting A Classical Perspective, made by Carl Laubin in 2012, is a capriccio of an imaginary city that consists of buildings designed by Driehaus Prize recipients.

Laureates

The following architects have been awarded the Driehaus Prize since 2003:

YearLaureateNationalityPhotoExample work (years built)WebsiteRef.
2003Léon KrierLuxembourgMasterplan of Poundbury, England (1993)
2004Demetri PorphyriosGreeceWhitman College, Princeton University, Princeton, USA (2002)
2005Quinlan TerryUnited KingdomMaitland Robinson Library, Cambridge, United Kingdom, (1993)
2006Allan GreenbergSouth AfricaAaron Burr Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, USA (2003–2005)
2007Jaquelin T. RobertsonUnited StatesMasterplan of Celebration, Florida, USA (2000)
2008Andrés Duany and Elizabeth Plater-ZyberkUnited StatesMasterplan of Seaside, Florida, USA (1985)
2009Abdel-Wahed El-WakilEgyptNew Qiblatain Mosque, Medina, Saudi Arabia (1987)
2010Rafael Manzano MartosSpainMuseo del Prado extension, Madrid, Spain (1990)
2011Robert A. M. SternUnited StatesFour Seasons Hotel New York Downtown, New York City, USA (2016)
2012Michael GravesUnited StatesResorts World Sentosa, Sentosa, Singapore (2010)
2013Thomas H. BeebyUnited StatesHarold Washington Library, Chicago, Illinois, USA (1991)
2014Pier Carlo BontempiItalyPlace de Toscane, Val d'Europe, France (2002)
2015David M. SchwarzUnited StatesGlobe Life Park in Arlington, Texas, USA (1994)
2016Scott MerrillUnited StatesSeaside Chapel in Florida, designed in 2001
2017Robert AdamUnited KingdomMillennium Gate in Atlanta, USA (2008)
2018Marc Breitman & Nada Breitman-JakovFranceWestermoskee, Amsterdam, Netherlands (2015)
2019Maurice CulotBelgiumMasterplan of Hardelot, France (2002)
2020Ong-ard SatrabhandhuThailandThe Rachamankha, Chiang Mai, Thailand (2004)
2021Sebastian TreeseGermanyEisenzahnstraße 1, Berlin, Germany (2016)
2022Rob KrierLuxembourgJudiciary City, Luxembourg (2008)
2023Ben PentreathUnited KingdomMasterplan of South East Faversham, England (2023)
2024Peter PennoyerUnited StatesThe Benson on Madison Avenue, New York City, USA (2023)
2025Liam O'ConnorUnited KingdomMemorial Gates, London (2002)

Laureates by country

RankCountryContinentLaureates
1United StatesNorth America8
2United KingdomEurope3
3LuxembourgEurope2
4BelgiumEurope1
EgyptAfrica1
FranceEurope1
GermanyEurope1
GreeceEurope1
ItalyEurope1
South AfricaAfrica1
SpainEurope1
ThailandAsia1

See also

Bibliography

  • . Richard H. Driehaus Prize official site. The University of Notre Dame.
  • Keegan, Edward. . Architect Magazine. Hanley Wood.
  • Richter, Jennifer. . Architectural Record. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
  • Keegan, Edward. . Architect Magazine. Hanley Wood.
  • . Building Design. UBM Built Environment.
  • . ArchitectureWeek. Artifice, Inc.
  • Leach, Susan Llewelyn (10 April 2003). . The Christian Science Monitor.
  • Van Gelder, Lawrence (March 4, 2003). . The New York Times.
  • 2009: Driehaus Prize and Henry Hope Reed Award, vol. 22, Clem Labine's Traditional Building, February 2009, p. 144, ISSN
  • 2008: Driehaus Prize and Henry Hope Reed Award, vol. 21, Clem Labine's Traditional Building, June 2008, p. 167, ISSN
  • 2007 Henry Hope Reed Award, Clem Labine's Traditional Building, June 2007, p. 167, ISSN
  • Driehaus Prize & Reed Award: honors for Greenberg & Morton, vol. 19, Clem Labine's Traditional Building, June 2006, p. 208, ISSN
  • Porphyrios prized: Demetri Porphyrios, the acclaimed architect and author, is this year's recipient of the Driehaus Prize, vol. 17, Clem Labine's Traditional Building, May–June 2004, p. 198, ISSN
  • Blackler, Zoe (17 April 2003), Krier lands anti-Pritzker for promotion of Classicism, vol. 217, Architects' Journal, p. 12, ISSN
  • Connell, Kim A. (2007), Pragmatic idealist: Jaquelin Robertson, Clem Labine's Traditional Building, pp. 10–14, ISSN
  • Yee, Roger (September 2003), "Classicism vs. modernism", Architect: The Magazine of the American Institute of Architects, 92 (9), Architecture: 31–32, ISSN

External links

  • Official site
  • , Notre Dame School of Architecture ()
  • (Video)
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