I have resisted writing a post about notable architects who happen to be women for a long time. Partially because these lists can be found on other websites that are most likely better researched and organized, but mostly I’ve held off because I’d like to think that a good architect is not defined by gender or that being a good architect and a woman isn’t a singularly special occurrence. I can’t presume to understand the nuances that come along with being a female working in this profession – it’s not just about sitting in an office with co-workers who respect your abilities regardless of gender. It’s about all the other aspects of being a practicing architect where challenges present themselves. I can’t recall having ever worked with a female contractor – what would it be like on a job site? Would a female architect have to endure (or enjoy) the same relentless number of fishing and hunting stories that I hear (despite the fact that I don’t hunt or fish)? I don’t know but I assume the tenor of the typical job site conversation would be different – not more or less respectful, just different. It could be the little things like the type of shoes someone chooses to wear. Does that really matter? Probably not but I can bet you that the construction worker who has never noticed what shoes his wife is wearing would notice what is on the feet of a female architect visiting the site.
The overwhelming majority of emails I receive are from women and the subject frequently includes a question about the challenges of being a woman in this profession. I do my best to address their concerns but I am but one voice. It would make more sense on one hand to ask these questions to a woman who is in the field of architecture rather than myself – but maybe that’s the point. How do I (a man) feel about women in architecture? I don’t feel anything because I expect them to be here.
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Kazuyo Sejima
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Zaha Hadid
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Marion Mahony Griffin (February 14, 1871 – August 10, 1961)
Marion Mahony Griffin was Frank Lloyd Wright’s first employee, and she became the world’s first woman to be officially licensed as an architect. Like many other women who were architectural pioneers, Marion’s contributions as Wright’s employee was lost in the shadow of her male associates. Nevertheless, Marion contributed greatly to Wright’s career and also to the career of her husband, Walter Burley Griffin.
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Jeanne Gang
Jeanne Gang is principal and founder of Studio Gang Architects, a 36-person architecture firm in Chicago, that has been recognized for its innovation and leadership in design. Ms. Gang’s work represents a diverse range of building typologies, from large-scale undertakings such as the 82-story Aqua Tower in downtown Chicago, which reconsiders the tall building as a site-specific structure, to the SOS Community Center on Chicago’s South Side, which visibly engages with the distinct material properties of concrete. In all of her projects, Ms. Gang explores new creative territory in materials, technology, and sustainability, and her work with Studio Gang has received national and international awards and recognition.
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Julia Morgan (January 20, 1872 – February 2, 1957)
Julia Morgan was the first woman to study architecture at the prestigious Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and the first woman to work as a professional architect in California. During her 45-year career, Julia Morgan designed more than 700 homes, churches, office buildings, hospitals, stores, and educational buildings, including the famous Hearst Castle. I have a giant book on the work of Julia Morgan sitting my desk which is what finally prompted me to finish this post – I want to learn more about this person because the architecture she created appears stunning.
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Denise Scott Brown
Over the past century, there have been many husband-wife teams. Typically the husbands have attracted the fame and glory while the women worked quietly (and some would argue, intelligently) in the background. However, Denise Scott Brown had already made important contributions to the field of urban design when she met and married her husband, Robert Venturi. Although he appears to be more frequently in the spotlight, her research and teachings have shaped modern understanding of the relationship between design and society.
There is a great interview of Denise Scott Brown conducted by Silvia Micheli here.
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Julie Eizenberg
Julie Eizenberg is another example of a successful husband and wife team. Forming Koning Eizenberg Architects (KEA) in 1981 with Hank Koning, Eizenberg and her partner have refocused architects’ attention on the value and design potential of socially responsible projects by demonstrating architectural excellence in the design of many tight budget, affordable housing projects and community buildings. In their buildings, one is encouraged to discover space and architecture for oneself guided by compositional cues, landscape strategies, spatial sequence and scale change. The result is innovative architecture with a rare kind of humanism. For me, I have always been drawn to their work because unlike the work of many others, the solutions always seem to be expeditiously solved using common materials in a clever way instead of relying on bleeding edge technology and big budgets. I am a big fan of this firm.
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Victoria Meyers
Victoria Meyers is a founding partner of hanrahanMeyers architects (hMa). Ms. Meyers has been the principal designer on a number of award winning projects in the firm whose projects include public institutional buildings, urban master plans, and award-winning residential projects. To make things even better, hanrahanMeyers architects maintains a blog – which was actually the very first architectural blog I started reading (and it’s a good one full of real architectural information – unlike this one).
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Other Resources
The Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation (BWAF) is a 501 (c) 3 non-profit research organization whose mission is to advance women’s contributions in shaping the built environment.
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National Center for Education Statistics:
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Progress and Notable Achievements of Women in Architecture
1900 – There are thus far 39 formal 4-year architectural program woman graduates in the US.
1958 – Currently there are a total of 320 registered women architects, which equals to 1% of the total number of registered architects in the US.
1980 – M. Rosaria Piomelli heads the City College of New York College of Architecture, becoming the first woman dean of a US architecture school
1983 – The AIA begins collecting data on the gender and race of its members
1985 – Norma Merrick Sklarek is the first African-American woman in the US to form her own firm, Siegel-Sklarek-Diamond. She is also the first African-American woman to license in the US and to be inducted as a fellow of the AIA
1988 – The number of female licensed architects is approximately 2100 (about 4%).
1999 – The number of female licensed architects is approximately 30,000 (about 15.5%), and the proportion of principals or partners who are women is 11.2%.
2001 – Of the 1,038 tenured architecture school faculty members, 16% are female and 8% are ethnic minorities. For architecture undergraduates, 37% are female, 15% are ethnic minorities. For graduates, 34% are female and 20% are ethnic minorities
2002 – The proportion of female licensed architects is about 19.9%, and the proportion of principals or partners who are women is 20.7%.
2003 – From the 2003 AIA Firm Survey, 20% of registered architects are female
Collected from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with additional statistics courtesy of the Almanac of Architecture and Design 2004. Washington, D.C.: Greenway Communications, 2004.
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