Francisco Gonzalez Pulido was born in Mexico City in
1970. In 1991, he graduated from Monterrey Tec with a Bachelor's in
Architecture. In 1993, he completed his first residential project,
a 5,000SF villa in the north-east of Mexico. From 1993 through1997,
he continued to design and develop high-end residential and
corporate projects such as a technical training center for General
Motors in Mexico City and the headquarters for PriceWaterhouse in
Mexico. In 1998, he was accepted to the Harvard Graduate School of
Design for a Master's Degree. His interest in science, technology,
and business took him to MIT and the Harvard Business School. At
the MIT Media Lab, he met the artist Krzysztof Wodiczko, who
significantly influenced his approach to design. In 2000, he moved
to Chicago to join the firm Murphy / Jahn - a firm whose roots
stretched back almost a century to the iconic architect and planner
Daniel Burnham. 8 years later, he became Helmut Jahn's first
partner and in 2012, President of the Company - rebranding the firm
JAHN in the process. In the last 10 years of his tenure at JAHN, he
designed a wide range of buildings across five continents. In 2017,
Gonzalez Pulido took the team of architects that he had been
leading as an independent studio within JAHN and formalized this
independence by founding FGP Atelier. Since founding The Atelier,
his work has been awarded the Green Building Award for the Americas
for the Orchid Educational Pavilion in Oaxaca by Architects
Newspaper as well as an Iconic Building Award for Land Rover
Regional Offices, Shanghai, a Rethinking the Future Award for
Diablos Rojos Baseball Stadium in Mexico City and Ted Gibson Salon
in Los Angeles, and The American Architecture Award for the Diablos
Rojos Baseball Stadium in Mexico City. Among other projects, he is
currently working on the Felipe Ángeles International Airport at
Santa Lucía that will handle 20M passengers in the first phase (85M
passengers in the ultimate phase) and serve the Mexico City
metropolitan region.
Mark Lamster is the architecture critic of the Dallas
Morning News, a professor in the architecture school at the
University of Texas at Arlington, and a Harvard Loeb Fellow. His
biography of the late architect Philip Johnson, The Man in the
Glass House (Little Brown, 2018), was a finalist for the National
Book Critics Circle Award for Biography.
After graduating from the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools,
Walker Thisted earned a Bachelor of Architecture from
Cornell University under the supervision of Dean Mohsen Mostafavi
followed by a Master of Fine Art from the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago. He has worked for Atelier Seraji in Paris,
Nagle Hartray in Chicago, and for Bill Pedersen and Jill Lerner at
Kohn, Pedersen, and Fox in New York. In 2014, Walker founded Naught
Architecture as an art, architecture, and design firm. He has been
commissioned to design private residences in Venezuela, Chicago,
and the US Virgin Islands and has shown art at galleries in
Chicago, New York, Ithaca, San Francisco, Rome, and Berlin. From
2016-2018, Walker was the Lead Producer of Video and Event content
for BuiltWorlds - a multiplatform media network devoted to
fostering innovation in the built environment. In January of 2018,
Walker joined FGP Atelier as Director of Business Development and
later Director of External and Public Affairs. In this role, he
applies his unique knowledge of design, trends in how the built
environment is constructed and maintained, new technologies being
used, and the theory of art and architecture. Throughout these
endeavors, Walker has maintained a critical writing and art
practice.
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