Women In Architecture 2000 Plus – Brinda Somaya

Women In Architecture 2000 Plus – Brinda Somaya

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‘Women In Architecture 2000 Plus’

Brinda Somaya, Curatorial Address at the Women In Architecture 2000 Plus Conference.

About: Brinda Somaya, In 2000, The HECAR Foundation organized a Conference and Exhibition, titled ‘Women in Architecture – 2000 Plus’, on the work of women architects with a focus on South Asia. The proceedings of the Conference was brought out in a book by The HECAR Foundation titled ‘An Emancipated Place’.

Brinda Somaya is an architect and urban conservationist. Upon completion of her Bachelor of Architecture from Mumbai University and her Master of Arts from Smith College in Northampton, MA, U.S.A, she started her firm Somaya and Kalappa Consultants in 1978 in Mumbai, India. In May 2012 she was the recipient of an Honorary Doctorate from her alma mater, Smith College. In 2014 she was awarded the Indian Institute of Architects – Baburao Mhatre Gold Medal for Lifetime Achievement. In 2016 she was appointed as the Chairperson of the Board of Governors, School of Planning and Architecture, Vijayawada. In 2017 She joined the Board of the Lafargeholcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction, Zurich, Switzerland. Presently she is the A.D. White Professor-at-large at Cornell University, U.S.A. Her firm has recently won the competition for the `Restoration and Upgradation of the historic Louis Kahn Buildings of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIM-A).Over four decades she has merged architecture, conservation and social equity in projects ranging from institutional campuses and rehabilitation of an earthquake-torn village to the restoration of an 18th century Cathedral, showing that progress and history need not be at odds. In 2004 Brinda Somaya won the UNESCO Asia-Pacific Heritage award for the restoration of the St. Thomas Cathedral in Mumbai. Her monograph `Brinda Somaya Works & Continuities’ was published in 2018.

LOCATION
Mumbai, India

STUDIO
Somaya and Kalappa Consultants

CURATOR
February 2000

DESIGN FIELD
Architecture and Practice