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NBBJ is an American global architecture, planning and design firm with offices in Boston, Columbus, Hong Kong, London, ... Los Angeles, California (2012) [72]
He began his career in Chicago under the mentorship of architect Helmut Jahn and later co-founded the sports and entertainment practice of NBBJ. Meis currently operates his own independent studio, MEIS Architects, established in 2007, [3] with offices in New York City and Los Angeles, California.
Buildings designed by American architecture firm NBBJ. Pages in category "NBBJ buildings" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.
University of California, Los Angeles: Capacity: 12,829 (1965–2011) 13,800 (2012–present) [1] [2] Construction; Broke ground: January 1964: Opened: June 11, 1965: Construction cost: $5 million (original construction – 1965) $136 million (renovation – 2012) [3] Architect: Welton Becket (original construction – 1965) NBBJ (renovation ...
He has worked with clients in North America and Asia, but based mainly in the Greater Los Angeles Area. His clients include architects and developers such as I. M. Pei, A. Quincy Jones, Arthur Erickson, Bennie Gonzales, William Pereira, Bing Thom, John Portman, Gio Ponti, Kajima USA, NBBJ and SOM.
Norton Building, also known as Zukors [2] and H. Jeyne Company Building, [3] is a historic six story building located at 601-605 S. Broadway and 312 W. 6th Street in the Jewelry District and Broadway Theater District in the historic core of downtown Los Angeles.
OUE acquired the 72-floor office building, the adjacent Maguire Gardens park, and a parking lot from a unit of Los Angeles–based real-estate investment trust MPG Office Trust Inc. [10] [11] On July 20, 2020, it was announced that Larry Silverstein ( Silverstein Properties ), the developer of the World Trade Center , purchased the building for ...
Diamond is a Design principal at HDR in Los Angeles, California. [1] She has also worked at HMC, NBBJ, RNL. [3] With Norma Sklarek and Margot Siegel, Diamond founded the Los Angeles firm Siegel, Sklarek and Diamond, the largest woman-owned firm of the time [2] which then became Siegel Diamond Architects.