Francisco Gonzalez-Pulido

Francisco Gonzalez-Pulido
Born February 1970 (age 46)
 MEX Mexico City
Nationality Mexican
Alma mater Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey Harvard University
Occupation Architect
Awards National Firm Award from the American Institute of Architects
Buildings Veer Towers

Francisco Gonzalez-Pulido (February, 1970) is a Mexican architect noted for his expressive yet rational design approach. From 1992 through 1998, he worked on his own and in 1999 he joined the Chicago firm “Murphy/Jahn” (which he renamed JAHN in 2012). He has worked on a wide range of building typologies with a strong emphasis on the design of skyscrapers and airports, in America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East.[1] After a longtime working with Helmut Jahn, he became its first partner in 2009 and president in 2012.

Life and education

Gonzalez-Pulido is a Mexican architect, born in February 13, 1970 in Mexico City. At the age of six he moved with his family to the north of Mexico.[2][3][4]

Since childhood he has always been interested in both: art and technology, but during his early years he thought of becoming a rock and roll musician.[3][4] To this date he continues to compose and record on his own. He also collects both vintage guitars and amplifiers.[3][4] As a teenager he enroll in school to be an architect, which he did when he was 17.[3][4] He attended the Tec de Monterrey in Monterrey from 1987 to 1991 and got his bachelor in the field of Architecture.[1][5] After working on his own for a while, he went back to school because he wanted to learn more about cutting edge designs in order to work on bigger projects. From 1998 to 1999 he attended Harvard’s School of Design and obtained his Master.[3][5][6]

Gonzalez-Pulido has been described as a man with “big personality” and “great ideas”.[2] He says that he was not an architect, he would have chosen to be a composer or a film director.[7]

Career

Soon after graduating from the Tec de Monterrey, at the age of 22 he was hired to build a summer house, a project that gave him experience as both designer and builder; he gained knowledge, skill and reputation from that project and allowed him to participate in design competitions, winning one Price Waterhouse. Nevertheless, they withdrew the offer when they knew that he did not had a firm to complete the work.[3]

During this time he founded 2MX3,[5][8] working as an independent architect in Mexico and the United States. Among his most important projects during that period are: U2 Studio in Dublin, the Casa Zárate and Museo M+M in Oaxaca, the Casa Palmas in Tamaulipas, the General Motors Centro Técnico S XXI in Mexico City.[6] Even after being accepted into Harvard he continued working individually and during that time he was the recipient of the 1st place in an ideas competition organized by Vicente Fox which at that time was a candidate for the presidency of Mexico. Gonzalez-Pulido project was called La Casa Sintética, defined as a modular pre-fabricated housing project, based on concepts of elastic space.[8]

In 1999 after graduating from Harvard, Gonzalez-Pulido moved to Chicago and began his collaboration with Murphy/Jahn The firm is acknowledged as one of the most important in the world and Helmut Jahn [8] one of Chicago’s most influential architects.[2][9] Gonzalez-Pulido had heard of Jahn’s collaborative concept of “Archi-Neering,” combining engineering and architecture to create a symbiotic result through a synergetic process. His original plan was to work for the firm for a short time and move on.[3][5] his vision, skills, leadership, drive and determination positioned him at the top and in 2003, he became executive vice president and then director of design from 2006 to 2012.[2] With Murphy/Jahn, Gonzalez-Pulido has worked on projects such as the DOHA Tower, Veer Towers, Leatop Plaza [5][6][9]

After a series of successful projects and in close collaboration with Helmut Jahn, he became Jahn’s first partner in 2009.[2][3][5] In 2012 he was named president of the firm, in charge of design, management, operations and business development.[2][8]

Gonzalez-Pulido indicates that he likes to be hands-on and work with contractors, manufacturers and clients to solve problems.[8] In addition to creating mega-projects, he also works designing furniture to match the architecture of the building where the pieces are located. One common element in this work is transparency to make a better connection with the building’s environment. For example, the furniture used at an ecological hotel in Hong Kong, a tower in Qatar and the Ethnobotanical Garden in Oaxaca.[9]

Influences and style

Gonzalez-Pulido has stated that he has admired his mentor’s work since he was a student in Mexico, and that he has much common ground with him. However, he admits that they share a good doses of creative tension that makes the collaboration rewarding.[8] [3]

Gonzalez-Pulido does not believe in styles, trends or trying to conform to any particular aesthetic preconceptions, be it from formulas or culture.[3][4] He believes that trying to follow or start a trend creates a bad result.[4] Instead, he works to find a unique solution to a unique problem aiming for beauty as a result of a harmonious combination of experimental, essential and evolving design criteria.[10] He thinks in terms of sequence and scenarios, placing himself at the center of the problem and the solution and believes that building light is not only a theoretical but an ethical position.[3]

Lightness is a recurrent topic in his lectures, writings and design. He has related lightness to the aesthetics and physics of the minimal, the search for boundaries. His preoccupation to create responsive architecture has led him to design energy efficient buildings that have superseded energy standards.[9][9] In the initial phases of design, he reads and writes extensively. The ideas are developed in the firm of physical models and 3D digital studies. Drawing is done only when he has a clear idea of what he wants to do.[6]

The first project that Gonzalez-Pulido directed completely with his own vision with Murphy/Jahn was the Veer Towers in Las Vegas, which has been noted for its bold, unconventional design.[2][8] He called the Veer Towers a “mix of utopia, surrealism and great ambition…”[7]

Veer Towers, Las Vegas, USA

Completed projects

Suvarnabhumi Airport. Bangkok, Thailand

Selected completed projects from 2000 to 2012

Selected completed projects from 2012 to 2014

Cosmopolitan. Warsaw, Poland

Projects under construction as main designer and partner in charge

Diablos Rojos del México Ballpark, Mexico City. Mexico

Publications

Recognition

His work has been exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Unbuilt Chicago and the U2 Studio in Dublin. In 2005 he won the National Firm Award from the American Institute of Architects .[6]

References

  1. 1 2 "Vuelven EXATEC a su alma máter". Tec de Monterrey. September 30, 2011. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Robert Channick (October 27, 2012). "Architect Helmut Jahn renames firm, promotes successor: Longtime protege Francisco Gonzalez-Pulido elevated to president". The Chicago Tribume. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Alejandra A Reyes (February 11, 2013). "Entrevista / Francisco González-Pulido / Dibuja su destino con éxito". Reforma. p. 68.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Francisco Gonzalez Pulido: Artífice su éxito" (PDF). El Imparcial. July 6, 2013. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "JAHN; Leading Global Architectural Firm Murphy/Jahn Announces New Name And Expanded Leadership". Journal of Engineering: 1477. November 7, 2012.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "Francisco González Pulido". Obras Web. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  7. 1 2 "Ten questions for Francisco Gonzalez Pulido" (PDF). CAF Members magazine. Chicago Architecture Foundation. Fall–Winter 2013. p. 3. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Chris Bentley (October 26, 2012). "Protege Rising". The Architects’ Newspaper. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 "Francisco González Pulido y las ciudades verticales". Fundación Alfredo Harp Helú. July 29, 2013. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  10. Miguel Angel Perez Velazquez (December 10, 2012). "Orgullosamente Mexicano". El Universal. Retrieved September 20, 2014.

External links

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