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Dov Karmi

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Name
  
Dov Karmi

Role
  
Architect


Education
  
Children
  
Ram Karmi

Died
  
May 14, 1962, Tel Aviv, Israel

People also search for
  
Ram Karmi, Ada Karmi-Melamede, Haia Karmi, Rivka Karmi-Edry

Villa Zaks - Dov Karmi - Public Domestica - Tel Aviv Museum


Dov Karmi (Hebrew: דב כרמי‎‎; ‎1905 – 14 May 1962) was a renowned Israeli architect of the pre-statehood era.

Contents

Ben Gurion 33 - Dov Karmi - Public Domestica - Tel Aviv Museum


Biography

Karmi was born in 1905, the son of Hannah and Sholom Weingarten, in Zhvanets, Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire. In 1921 the Weingartens emigrated with their children to the British Mandate of Palestine, (now Israel).

He initially studied art at the Bezalel School of Art and Craft, Jerusalem, but was attracted to architecture and went to Belgium to complete his studies in this field at Ghent University.

Karmi worked in partnership with several other architects, including Zeev Rechter and, later in life, with his son Ram Karmi. During his professional career he designed more than two hundred buildings, mostly in Tel Aviv . Karmi's main style was modernist; he influenced a generation of Israeli architects.

Israel Prize

In 1957, Karmi was awarded the Israel Prize, for architecture, the first recipient of the Prize in this field.

Karmi married Haia Maklev; the couple had two children, both of whom became notable architects. In 2002, Karmi's son, Ram Karmi, was awarded the Israel Prize for architecture and Carmi's daughter, Ada Karmi-Melamede, was awarded the Israel Prize for architecture, in 2007.

Major buildings

  • Max-Liebling House, Tel Aviv, 1936
  • Culture Palace, Tel Aviv, 1957 (with Zeev Rechter and Yaakov Rechter)
  • References

    Dov Karmi Wikipedia