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In conversation with RECORD, the founder of the New York-based firm known for its work in renovation and expansion to cultural projects, defends designs that have faced recent controversy.
Annabelle Selldorf, principal at Selldorf Architects, joins the podcast to discuss the process of designing San Diego’s Museum of Contemporary Art, her firm’s work at London’s National Gallery, and finding her way to architecture through the New York art scene.
Selldorf Architects and the curatorial team created a series of temporary galleries for the Frick’s collection of European art, reframing its stories in the process.
Annabelle Selldorf’s discreet plan to renovate the 1914 mansion on the Upper East Side of Manhattan frames views to the museum’s Russell Page–designed garden.
In 1984, the SNCF, France’s national railway, shut down a rail yard—with a handful of handsome 19th-century industrial sheds— in the sun-washed southern city of Arles.