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Fernando Romero

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Nationality
  
Mexican

Name
  
Fernando Romero

Structures
  
Acuario Inbursa

Occupation
  
Architect

Role
  
Architect

Fernando Romero fernandoromero500jpg
Born
  
October 11, 1971 (age 52) (
1971-10-11
)
Mexico City, Mexico

Buildings
  
Soumaya Museum, 2012 G-20 Los Cabos summit, Plaza Mariana

Projects
  
FREE City, new Mexico City International Airport

Education
  
Universidad Iberoamericana

Books
  
Hyperborder, The Colors of Eden: Memories of a Runaway Boy, If...Then: Architectural Speculations

Fernando romero biografia


Fernando Romero (born 11 October 1971) is a Mexican architect, urban designer, educator, author and philanthropist. In 2011, his company FR-EE Fernando Romero Enterprise received international recognition for the construction of the Soumaya Museum in Mexico City. He is the son-in-law of the Mexican billionaire, Carlos Slim.

Contents

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Fernando romero on agave


Background

Fernando Romero is the great grandson of Mexican developer Alejandro Romero Lesbros, who was a pioneer in the development of several boroughs and recreation districts in Mexico City throughout the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. His grandfather Raul Romero Erazo and father Raul Romero Zenizo continued the family business. He studied architecture at Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City from 1991 until 1995, serving as a President of the Alumni Society. In 2012, Fernando Romero lectured as a Visiting Professor at Columbia University in New York City. He is a member of the American Institute of Architects and CAMSAM (Mexican Chamber of Architects).

Early career

Fernando Romero NewSchool of Architecture and Design Lecture Series

In 1995, following graduation, Fernando Romero joined the office of Rem Koolhaas, Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), in Rotterdam, Netherlands. In 1999, Fernando Romero served as the Project Leader who won the entry for Casa da Musica in Porto, Portugal. Located on a Unesco Heritage Site, the iconic building has become recognized as a distinct international performing arts venue and a landmark for the city of Porto. After its inauguration in 2005, The New York Times described the building as "one of the most important concert halls built in the last 100 years".

Founding FR-EE

Fernando Romero Architect Fernando Romero Gives NOWNESS A Tour Of His

Fernando Romero founded FR-EE in Mexico City in 2000. The work of FR-EE is strongly rooted in research and studies of project context/site, rather than subscribing to an explicit ideology and signature style. FR-EE's projects embrace diversity and the idea that design should find sustainable solutions which ensure economic viability and social/environmental integrity. FR-EE's work is extensive and comprises a variety of scales, programs and morphologies located all over the world.

Fernando Romero httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Over the past decade, the accolades of Fernando Romero and FR-EE have included: Honorary Fellowship by American Institute of Architects; Americas Property Award (2012); 50 Creative Pioneers in (2012) by Fast Company; Movers and Shakers (of 2011) by Fast Company; 50 personalities of Mexico (2011); Young Architects Award, Mexican Society of Architects (2009); Red Dot Award: Best of the Best (2006).

Fernando Romero has lectured and presented the work of FR-EE in all hemispheres.

In 2010, FR-EE formed a separate office in New York City to serve a growing number of cultural, religious, and commercial projects across the United States.

Distinctions

All along in his career, Fernando Romero has been awarded with numerous international and national distinctions, such as:

  1. 2010 year's architect by Fashion Group.
  2. 2009 young architecture by the Mexican Architecture Society.
  3. 2005 Bauhaus award by Villa S. March.
  4. Architecture Pamphlet award for "Translations" (Fernando Romero's book).
  5. 2005 SARA's award by the American architecture society.
  6. 2004 Bauhaus international award in Germany.
  7. 2002 Global leader of tomorrow by World Economic Forum.

Projects / Architectural concept

Romero seeks to capture in his works a contemporary concept through the use of art materials and technology, supported by research from other fields and disciplines. It is commonly referred to by the futuristic and minimalist aesthetic that employs in his works. Moreover, he seeks to integrate sustainable and green walls in their projects.

G-20 Convention Center

The Convention Center, located in Los Cabos, Mexico, was designed by FR-EE to host the 2012 G-20 Los Cabos summit. It has a capacity of 6,500 people and an area of 5,400 square meters. It is set for conferences, exhibitions, festivals and other events and was built in less than seven months. One of the outstanding features is the green wall found in its structure, which is the largest in the world with an area of 2,700 square meters.

Others

  1. Eco Museum, Mexico City (2006-2007), described by Fernanda Canales in her book "Mexican architecture: 1900-2010" as a project that allows an association between the architecture with the general culture.
  2. General Offices Inbursa, Mexico City (2001-2003).
  3. Cervantes Tower: residential complex, Mexico City (2009-2010)
  4. Teahouse, Jinhua, China (2004-2006), considered a project that placed Mexican architecture within the architectural platform that seemed unattainable to Mexico a few years ago. The masterplan was designed by Herzog & de Meuron, and the initiative goes back to Chinese artist Ai Weiwei.

Soumaya Museum

The Soumaya Museum, located in Nuevo Polanco in Mexico City, was designed under the direction of Fernando Romero in 2010. The museum has an area of 22,000 square meters and exhibits about 70,000 objects from different collections from the 15th century until the 20th century. The exterior facade is composed of sixteen thousand hexagonal tiles, which generate a different effect depending on the angle at which you are standing. The internal structure is composed of a ramp with 6 floors, each one with a specific theme. It has become an icon for Mexican contemporary architecture and a must for locals and tourists. In October 2015, the number of visitors reached 5 millions, and so, the Soumaya Museum is the most visited private museum in the world.

New Mexico City international airport (NAICM)

The new airport in Mexico City was designed in collaboration between FR-EE and Foster + Partners; and promises to be one of the largest airports in the world and the largest in the Americas, with an area of 555,000 square meters. Arup is the engineer on the project and performed original masterplan. The terminal will use very little power, and so it will become the most sustainable airport in the world. It will have short spaces throughout the halls; therefore, no internal trains or subway tunnels will be used. It will have six lanes, and will be able to mobilize up to 120 million passengers per year. It is estimated that the project will require an investment of about 9,150 million dollars and is considered to be the most important work of the administration of the president Enrique Pena Nieto.

Initiatives

Fernando Romero and FR-EE are involved in a wide range of educational and cultural activities. Regeneration, a project restoring selected pieces of modern Mexican architecture, preserves culture and creates awareness about the role of architecture and design in Mexico; Archivo Diseno y Arquitectura, located in Mexico City, situates a private collection and experimental exhibition space for industrial design objects; and "FR-EE Time" is a year-long fellowship bestowed upon a Mexican architect under the age of 35, providing an opportunity to travel and research a specific topic in depth.

Books

Books by Fernando Romero:

  • FR-EE, Mapas (Mexico City, 2013)
  • You Are The Context (New York, 2012)
  • Simplexity, Hatje Cantz (Germany, 2010)
  • Hyperborder; Princeton Architectural Press (New York, 2007): A research into one of the most active borders in the world: Mexico-USA
  • The Air Is Blue (Mexico City, 2007): In homage to Luis Barragan, an exposition curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist and Pedro Reyes (Artist), with 30 contemporary artists
  • Translation, ACTAR Editorial (Barcelona, 2005)
  • ZMVM (Mexico City, 2000): An analysis of Mexico City’s urban transformation
  • References

    Fernando Romero Wikipedia


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