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NBBJ provides services in architecture, interiors, planning and urban design, experience design, healthcare and workplace consulting, landscape design, and lighting design. The firm is involved in multiple markets and building types including: cultural and civic, corporate, commercial, healthcare, education, science, sports, and urban environments.
Buildings designed by American architecture firm NBBJ. Pages in category "NBBJ buildings" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.
San Francisco Public Library: Technical details; Floor count: 7: Floor area: 376,000 sq ft (34,900 m 2) Design and construction; Architect(s) Pei Cobb Freed & Partners and Simon Martin-Vegue Winkelstein Moris [2] Developer: San Francisco Public Library
San Francisco firm Homework transforms a grand historic house in Pacific Heights into a home brimming with color and life for a young family.
44 Montgomery is a 43-story, 172 m (564 ft) office skyscraper in the heart of San Francisco's Financial District. [5] Groundbreaking was in the spring of 1964. [6] When completed in 1967, it was the tallest building west of Dallas, surpassed by 555 California Street (built as the world headquarters of Bank of America) in 1969.
Studio Gang is an American architecture and urban design practice with offices in Chicago, New York, San Francisco, and Paris. [1] Founded and led by architect Jeanne Gang, the Studio is known for its material research and experimentation, collaboration across a wide range of disciplines, and focus on sustainability. [2]
Jeanne Gang (born March 19, 1964) is an American architect and the founder and leader of Studio Gang (established in 1997), an architecture and urban design practice with offices in Chicago, New York, San Francisco, and Paris.
The revised design by NBBJ, which had been in development since 2012, [8] was unveiled in May 2013 to a mixed reaction from the city's project design review board. While hailed as a bold design, it was criticized for the lack of rain protection, public access, and the amount of energy needed to climatize the facility.