Yung Ho Chang

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Yung Ho Chang
File:Yonghe Zhang.jpg
Nationality Chinese, American
Occupation Architect
Awards New York Alliance of Architecture Award for young architects, 1992
Practice Atelier Feichang Jianzhu

Yung Ho Chang (Chinese: 张永和; pinyin: Zhang Yonghe) is a Chinese-American[1] architect and Professor of MIT Architecture. He formerly served as the Head of the Department of Architecture at MIT.

He studied at the Nanjing Institute of Technology (now Southeast University) before moving to the US. Then he received his M.Arch. from the University of California, Berkeley and taught in the US for 15 years before returning to Beijing to establish China's first private architecture firm, Atelier FCJZ. He has exhibited internationally as an artist as well as architect and is widely published, including the monograph Yung Ho Chang/Atelier Feichang Jianzhu: A Chinese Practice. His interdisciplinary research focuses on the city, materiality, and tradition. He often combines his research activities with design commissions.

Before he came to MIT, he had also served as the Kenzo Tange Chair Professor at Harvard Graduate School of Design as well as the Eliel Saarinen Chair Professor at University of Michigan.

Publications

In 1997, he published Feichang Architecture, an album of his works. In 2002, he published The Album for Feichang Jianzhu Atelier 1,2.

He has published many articles in journals including Architecture Today in France, The Art of the Moment in Italy, New Architecture and Space Design in Japan, Architecture in the U.S., Space in Korea, and the World Architecture in Britain.

He facilitated a workshop session at the Holcim Forum 2007 for the Holcim Foundation with the title "Informal Urbanism".[2]

Awards

  • Business Week/ Architectural Record China Award (Villa Shizilin) 2006
  • China Architectural Arts Award (Hebei Education Publishing House) 2004
  • WA Architectural Prize (Villa Shizilin) 2004
  • China Architectural Arts Award (Pingod Shopping Street) 2003
  • The 2000 UNESCO Prize for the Promotion of the Arts
  • Progressive Architecture Citation Award 1996
  • New York Alliance of Architecture, 1992 Award for young architects
  • Steedman Traveling Fellowship, Washington University in St. Louis 1992
  • Winner, 3x3+9 Design Competition, AIA San Francisco Chapter & Architectural Foundation of San Francisco 1991
  • Walter B. Sanders Fellowship, University of Michigan 1988 ~ 89
  • First Prize, From Table to Tablescape Design Competition, Formica Corporation, US 1988
  • First Place, Shinkenchiku Residential Design Competition Japan Architect, Japan 1986
  • The first prize of International Competition of the Design of Council House in Japan 1986
  • Architectural Painting Award &Brown and Bakewell&Weihe in University of California, Berkeley

References

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  2. 2nd Day Program - Holcim Forum 2007

External links