Arch Madness 2016: Richard Meier Wins

The New York architect beat out the Los Angeles-based Thom Mayne for the final title.

2 MIN READ
The Atheneum

Scott Frances

The Atheneum

Dear ARCHITECT Readers,

After five rounds of voting, New York architect Richard Meier has been named the winner of this year’s Arch Madness tournament.

Earlier this month, ARCHITECT compiled the 32 most recent AIA Gold Medal Winners into a bracket inspired by basketball’s March Madness tournament. Instead of professional sports teams, our players were notable architects (last year’s theme was buildings), and we the pitted the oldest winner against the most recent and then met in the middle.

Over the past two weeks, readers cast more than 7,192 votes in a total of five elimination rounds. In the final round, we saw Morphosis principal Thom Mayne, FAIA, go up against against Richard Meier, FAIA, of Richard Meier & Partners Architects. In the end, the abstract painter and architect beat out the SCI-Arc co-founder and trustee by 8 percent.

In each round, Meier beat out his peers by a bigger margin than Mayne, which you can see if you go back through the brackets, shown below. Only Julia Morgan in round three and Tadao Ando, Hon. FAIA, in round four gave Meier a valiant challenge. (Meier made it to the final over Ando with a mere four percent lead.)

Meier, one of the New York Five, is known for his stark, geometric structures. After receiving his B.Arch. from Cornell University in 1957, and spending some time in Europe, the young Meier worked for Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and then for Marcel Breuer. He opened his own practice in 1963 and went on to design iconic sites such as the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art in 1995 and the Getty Center in Los Angeles 1997, which catapulted his career. He was awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 1984.

Select an architect to learn more and to vote!

1 2 3 4 Denise Scott Brown & Robert Venturi Richard Joseph Neutra Richard Joseph Neutra Moshe Safdie I.M. Pei Tadao Ando César Pelli Edward Larrabee Barnes Charles W. Moore Fumihiko Maki William Wayne Caudill Steven Holl Nathaniel A. Owings Samuel Mockbee Renzo Piano E. Fay Jones Sir Norman Foster Peter Q. Bohlin Arthur Erickson Michael Graves Richard Meier Antoine Predock Benjamin Thompson WINNER Josep Lluís Sert Julia Morgan Thom Mayne Romaldo Giurgola Glenn Marcus Murcutt Joseph Esherick Santiago Calatrava Kevin Roche Ricardo Legorreta Frank Gehry Richard Joseph Neutra Steven Holl Renzo Piano Sir Norman Foster Julia Morgan Peter Q. Bohlin Antoine Predock Richard Meier Renzo Piano Julia Morgan Richard Meier Renzo Piano Richard Meier Richard Meier Richard Meier Thom Mayne Thom Mayne Frank Gehry Thom Mayne Tadao Ando I. M. Pei Frank Gehry Glenn Marcus Murcutt Santiago Calatrava Thom Mayne Charles W. Moore Tadao Ando I. M. Pei Fumihiko Maki Tadao Ando

Learn more about Meier's work in ARCHITECT’s Project Gallery.

The Atheneum

Scott Frances

The Atheneum

The Atheneum in New Harmony, Ind., which won the AIA's Twenty-Five Year Award in 2008.

Ezra Stoller/ESTO


High Museum of Art, in Atlanta.

Jeffery Gerhardt/Flickr via Creative Commons license

Jeffery Gerhardt/Flickr via Creative Commons license

The Smith House, in Darien, Conn., which won the AIA's Twenty-Five Year Award in 2000.

View from the north

Courtesy Richard Meier & Partners Architects with Diametro Arquitectos | Renderings by Vize.com

View from the north

The Reforma Towers, in Mexico City, which was given a Progressive Architecture Award by ARCHITECT.

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