Name | City | US State/ Country | Completed | Other Information | Image |
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David Cabin | Idyllwild | California | | Built with Greg Walsh. Owned by Matthew and Mary Norris Idyllwild, California | |
Kline Residence | Bel Air | California | |
Banneker Fire Station[3] | Columbia | Maryland | | |
Exhibit Center[4] | Columbia | Maryland | | Demolished in |
Merriweather Post Pavilion[5] | Columbia | Maryland | | |
Park West Apartments[6][7][8] | Irvine | California | | Owned by the Irvine Company.
Designed with Greg Walsh; landscape design by POD. Formerly University Park Apartments. Frank gehry buildings architecture Frank Gehry is a Pritzker Prize -winning architect. His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions. His style is sometimes described as Deconstructivist or postmodern , although he has rejected the second term. Warming Hut [ 62 ]. Contents move to sidebar hide. |
Ronald Davis Studio & Residence | Malibu | California | | Renovated by Sue and Alex Glasscock, later owned by Patrick and Jillian Dempsey. Featured in Architectural Digest in [9] Destroyed November, Woolsey Fire |
Rouse Company Headquarters[10] | Columbia | Maryland | | Renovated into a Whole Foods Market in | |
Concord Pavilion | Concord | California | | Originally the Chronicle Pavilion, it has also been called the Sleep Train Pavilion | |
Harper House | Baltimore | Maryland | |
Gehry Residence[11] | Santa Monica | California | | Frank Gehry's home | |
Loyola Law School (various buildings)[12] | Los Angeles | California | | |
Spiller House | Venice | California | |
Santa Monica Place | Santa Monica | California | | Mostly demolished and renovated from to | |
Cabrillo Marine Aquarium | San Pedro | California | | |
California Aerospace Museum, California Museum of Science and Industry | Los Angeles | California | | |
Edgemar Retail Complex | Santa Monica | California | | |
Norton House[13] | Venice | California | | |
Frances Howard Goldwyn Hollywood Regional Library | Hollywood | California | | |
Information and Computer Science (ICS)/Engineering Research Facility (ICS/ERF)[14][15][16] | University of California, Irvine | California | | Awarded by the American Institute of Architects in and Demolished in [15] | |
Sirmai-Peterson House[17] | Thousand Oaks | California | |
Winton Guest House | Owatonna | Minnesota | | Moved in to its current location at the University of St.
Thomas Gainey Conference Center.[18][19] |
Yale Psychiatric Institute[20] | Yale University, New Haven | Connecticut | | In collaboration with Allan Dehar Associates of New Haven |
Rockwell and Marna Schnabel House[21] | Brentwood | California | |
Herman Miller factory (currently William Jessup University) | Rocklin | California | | Factory closed in and was purchased by William Jessup University.
Underwent re-design by architect Russ Taylor prior to opening of campus in [22] |
Vitra Design Museum | Weil am Rhein | Germany | | |
Rockwell Engineering Center[8] and McDonnell Douglas Engineering Auditorium[23] | University of California, Irvine | California | [24] | |
Newbury Street renovation[25] | Boston | Massachusetts | | Renovated luxury condominiums. | |
Chiat/Day Building | Venice | California | | |
Artists' Studios | Santa Monica | California | | Mixed use, residential and working artists.
6 loft units, each privately owned | |
Iowa Advanced Technology Laboratories[26] | University of Iowa, Iowa City | Iowa | | |
Disney Village | Disneyland Paris, Marne-la-Vallée | France | | Formerly Festival Disney | |
Olympic Fish | Olympic Village, Barcelona | Spain | | |
Frederick Weisman Museum of Art[27] | University of Minnesota, Minneapolis | Minnesota | | |
Center for the Visual Arts[28] | Toledo | Ohio | | |
Cinémathèque Française[29] | Paris | France | | |
Vitra International Headquarters[30] | Basel | Switzerland | | |
Siedlung Goldstein[31] | Frankfurt | Germany | | |
Energie Forum Innovation[32] | Bad Oeynhausen | Germany | | |
Anaheim Ice[33][8] | Anaheim | California | | Formerly Disney Ice | |
Team Disney Anaheim[34] | Anaheim | California | | Administration facility for the Disneyland Resort | |
Dancing House | Prague | Czech Republic | | |
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao | Bilbao | Spain | | |
Der Neue Zollhof[35] | Düsseldorf | Germany | | |
University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center[36] | University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati | Ohio | | |
Condé Nast Publishing Headquarters Cafeteria[37] | Times Square, New York City | New York | |
DZ Bank building | Pariser Platz, Berlin | Germany | | |
Museum of Pop Culture | Seattle | Washington | | |
Gehry Tower | Hanover | Germany | | |
Issey Miyake flagship store | Manhattan | New York | |
Weatherhead School of Management Peter B.
Lewis building[38][39] | Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland | Ohio | | |
Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts[40][41] | Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson | New York | | |
Maggie's Dundee, Ninewells Hospital[42][43] | Dundee | Scotland | | |
Walt Disney Concert Hall | Los Angeles | California | | |
Ray and Maria Stata Center[44] | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge | Massachusetts | | |
Jay Pritzker Pavilion[45] | Millennium Park, Chicago | Illinois | | |
BP Pedestrian Bridge | Millennium Park, Chicago | Illinois | | |
MARTa Herford | Herford | Germany | | |
IAC/InterActiveCorp West Coast Headquarters | West Hollywood | California | |
Marqués de Riscal Hotel[46] | Elciego | Spain | | |
IAC Building | Chelsea, Manhattan[47][48] | New York | | |
Mariza show stage, at the Walt Disney Concert Hall[49] | Los Angeles | California | |
Art Gallery of Ontario | Toronto | Ontario | | under renovation | |
Peter B.
Lewis Library[50] | Princeton University, Princeton | New Jersey | | |
Serpentine Gallery Summer Pavilion[51] | London | England | | Temporary | |
Novartis Pharma A.G. Campus[52] | Basel | Switzerland | | |
Danish Cancer Society Counseling Center[53] | Aarhus | Denmark | | |
Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health[54] | Las Vegas | Nevada | | |
Ohr-O'Keefe Museum Of Art[55] | Biloxi | Mississippi | | Originally planned to open in , hit by Hurricane Katrina in Additional buildings opened in | |
New World Center[56] | Miami Beach | Florida | | |
New York by Gehry at Eight Spruce Street[57] | Manhattan | New York | | First skyscraper[58] | |
Opus Hong Kong[59] | Hong Kong | Hong Kong | | story residential block located at 53 Stubbs Road, developed by Swire Group. | |
Pershing Square Signature Center[60] | Manhattan | New York | | 70, sq.Frank gehry buildings nyc From his earliest works, architect Frank Gehry has shattered conventions, designing buildings that some critics say are more sculpture than architecture — think Guggenheim Bilbao and the Disney Concert Hall. Using unorthodox materials and space-age methods, Gehry creates unexpected, twisted forms. His work has been called radical, playful, organic, sensual — a modernism called Deconstructivism. The architect chose brushed stainless steel for the exterior of this music center so that the sculptural building would reflect light and color from the pastural landscape of New York's Hudson Valley. Undulating stainless steel canopies project over the box office and lobby. ft. performing arts center. |
Duplex Residence[61] | New Orleans | Louisiana | | Designed and built for the Make It Right Foundation New Orleans. LEED Platinum rated |
"Five Hole" Warming Hut[62] | Winnipeg | Canada | | Temporary timber and ice warming hut on the river | |
Maggie's Hong Kong[63] | Hong Kong | Hong Kong | | |
Biomuseo[64] | Panama City | Panama | | |
Louis Vuitton Foundation for Creation[65][66][67] | Paris | France | | |
Dr Chau Chak Wing Building[68][69][70] | University of Technology, Sydney | Australia | | |
Facebook West Campus[71][72] | Menlo Park | California | |
Pierre Boulez Concert Hall | Berlin | Germany | |
Frank Gehry Residence | Santa Monica | California | |
Michael Eisner Residence[73] | Basalt | Colorado | |
Thomas Safran & Associates Headquarters[74] | Brentwood | California | |
Louis Vuitton Maison Seoul[75] | Seoul | South Korea | |
Dwight D.
Eisenhower Memorial[76][77] | Washington | D.C. | | |
LUMA Arles[78] | Arles | France | | |
Youth Orchestra Los Angeles Concert Hall[79][80] | Inglewood | California | |
The Children's Institute[81] | Watts, Los Angeles | California | |
Grand Avenue Project[82] | Los Angeles | California | |