Will Aslop
Will Aslop, an architect and artist, was born at Northampton (1947),
studied at the Architectural Association in London, worked with Cedric Price
from 1973 to 1977, with Roderick Ham in 1977 and with Jan St?rmer until early
2001, when he founded Alsop Architects, with branches in London, Rotterdam and
Moscow. His most significant projects completed in these years were the
Passenger & Ferry Terminal in Hamburg (1990); Barrage & Visitor Centre in
Cardiff (1991); Le Grand Bleu Government Headquarters in Marseilles (1991); the
Tottenham Hale and North Greenwich Jubilee Line Underground Stations in London
(1991 and 1992); the stage at Groningen (1995), the Reuters headquarters in
Moscow (1996); the State Archives in Hamburg (1998). Alsop’s work and projects
have received wide recognition—an honorary doctorate from Leicester University
and an honorary fellowship from the Royal Society of British Sculptors—and
awards that include the riba National Award for the Visitor’s Centre in Cardiff
(1991) and the riba Civic and Community Architecture Award for Le Grand Bleu
(1997) . His professional work has always been integrated with teaching, first
as tutor of sculpture at St Martin’s School of Art in London and then at various
leading universities in Britain and abroad. Since 1997 he has taught at
Technische Universität and directs its Hochbau institute in Vienna.