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{{short description|Spanish engineer and architect}}
{{Infobox Engineer
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
|image = Dune SantiagoCalatrava.jpg
{{family name hatnote|Calatrava|Valls|lang=Spanish}}
|image_size =
{{Infobox engineer
|caption = L'Umbracle, [[Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències|City of Arts and Sciences]], Valencia
|name = Santiago Calatrava Valls
| image = Santiago Calatrava (cropped).jpg
| image_size =
|nationality= [[Spain|Spanish]]
| caption = Calatrava in 2010
|birth_date={{birth date|1951|7|28|mf=y}} (age 58)
| name = Santiago Calatrava Valls
|birth_place= [[Valencia, Spain|Valencia]], [[Spain]]
|nationality = Spanish-Swiss
|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1951|7|28|df=y}}
|birth_place = [[Valencia]], Spain
|death_date =
|death_date =
|death_place =
|death_place =
|education = [[University of Valencia|Valencia]] Arts School<br>[[University of Valencia|Valencia]] Architecture School<br>[[Swiss Federal Institute of Technology]]
|education = [[Polytechnic University of Valencia]]<br />[[ETH Zurich|Swiss Federal Institute of Technology]]
|spouse =
|parents =
|parents =
|children =
|children =
|discipline = [[Structural engineer]], [[Architect]], [[Sculptor]]
|discipline = [[Structural engineer]], Architect, sculptor
|institutions = [[Institution of Structural Engineers]]
|institutions = [[Institution of Structural Engineers]]
|practice_name = Santiago Calatrava
|practice_name = Santiago Calatrava
|significant_projects = [[Athens Olympic Sports Complex]]<br>[[Alamillo bridge]]<br>[[Chords Bridge]]<br>[[Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències]]
|significant_projects = [[Turning Torso]] <br />[[Athens Olympic Sports Complex]]<br />[[Auditorio de Tenerife]]<br />[[Alamillo bridge]]<br />[[Chords Bridge]]<br />[[Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències]]<br />[[Liège-Guillemins railway station]]<br />[[Museum of Tomorrow]]<br /> [[World Trade Center station (PATH)]]<br /> [[Dubai Creek Tower]]<br /> [[St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church (Manhattan)]]
|significant_design =
|significant_design =
|significant_advance =
|significant_advance =
|significant_awards = [[IStructE]] Gold Medal<br>[[American Institute of Architects]] Gold Medal<br>[[Eugene McDermott]] Award<br>[[Prince of Asturias Award]]
|significant_awards = [[European Prize for Architecture]]<br /> [[AIA Gold Medal]]<br />[[IStructE]] Gold Medal<br />[[Eugene McDermott]] Award<br />[[Prince of Asturias Award]]<br />[[Auguste Perret Prize]]
}}
}}


'''Santiago Calatrava Valls''' (born 28 July 1951) is a [[Spaniards|Spanish]] architect, [[structural engineer]], sculptor and painter, particularly known for his bridges supported by single leaning pylons, and his railway stations, stadiums, and museums, whose sculptural forms often resemble living organisms.{{Sfn|Taschen|Taschen|2016|page=108}} His best-known works include the [[Athens Olympic Sports Complex|Olympic Sports Complex of Athens]], the [[Milwaukee Art Museum]], the [[Turning Torso]] tower in [[Malmö]], Sweden, the [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]] in New York City, the [[Auditorio de Tenerife]] in [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]], the [[Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge]] in [[Dallas]], Texas, and his largest project, the [[City of Arts and Sciences]] and [[Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia|Opera House]] in his birthplace, [[Valencia]]. His architectural firm has offices in New York City, [[Doha]], and [[Zurich]].
'''Santiago Calatrava Valls''' (born July 28, 1951) is an internationally recognized and award-winning [[Valencian Community|Valencian]] [[Spain|Spanish]] [[architect]], [[sculptor]] and [[structural engineer]] whose principal office is in [[Zurich]], [[Switzerland]]. Classed now among the elite designers of the world, he has offices in Zurich, Paris and Valencia.


==Early life & education==
==Early life==
Calatrava was born on 28 July 1951, in Benimàmet, an old municipality now part of [[Valencia, Spain]]. His Calatrava surname was an old aristocratic one from medieval times, and was once associated with an order of knights in Spain.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Santiago Calatrava Biography – life, family, children, name, story, wife, school, mother, young – Newsmakers Cumulation|url = http://www.notablebiographies.com/newsmakers2/2005-A-Fi/Calatrava-Santiago.html|website = notablebiographies.com|access-date = 18 January 2016}}</ref> He had his primary and secondary schooling in Valencia, and, beginning in 1957, studied drawing and painting at the School of Applied Art. In 1964, as the regime of General [[Francisco Franco]] relaxed and Spain became more open to the rest of Europe, he went to France as an exchange student. In 1968, after completing secondary school, he went to study at the [[Ecole des Beaux Arts]] in Paris, but he arrived in the midst of student uprisings and turmoil in Paris, and returned home. Back in Valencia, he discovered a book about the architecture of [[Le Corbusier]], which persuaded him that he could be both an artist and an architect. He enrolled in the Higher School of Architecture at the [[Polytechnic University of Valencia]]. He received his diploma as an architect and then did higher studies in urbanism. {{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=7}} At the university he completed independent projects with fellow students, publishing two books on the vernacular architecture of Valencia and [[Ibiza]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://smu.edu/newsinfo/releases/m2013b.html |title=Biography: Santiago Calatrava |publisher=Southern Methodist University News |date=7 October 2002 |access-date=12 November 2013}}</ref>
Calatrava was born in [[Benimámet]], an old municipality now integrated as an urban part of [[Valencia, Spain]], where he pursued undergraduate studies at the Architecture School and Arts and Crafts School. Following graduation in 1975, he enrolled in the [[Swiss Federal Institute of Technology]] (ETH) in [[Zürich|Zürich, Switzerland]] for graduate work in [[civil engineering]]. In 1981, after completing his doctoral [[thesis]], "On the Foldability of [[space frame|Space Frames]]", he started his architecture and engineering practice.


In 1975, he enrolled in the [[ETH Zurich|Swiss Federal Institute of Technology]] in [[Zurich]], Switzerland for a second degree in civil engineering. In 1981, he was awarded a doctorate in the department of architecture, after completing his thesis on "The Pliability of three-dimensional structures." {{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=91}} Speaking of this period, Calatrava told biographer Philip Jodidio:"The desire to start all over at zero was very strong in me. I was fascinated by the concept of gravity and convinced that it was necessary to begin work with simple forms." {{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=7}} Calatrava explained that he was particularly influenced by the work of the early 20th century Swiss engineer [[Robert Maillart]] (1872–1940), which taught him that, "with an adequate combination of force and mass, you can create emotion."{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=7}}
==Career==
[[Image:Calatrava Puente del Alamillo Seville.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Puente del Alamillo]] at night, made for the [[Expo 92|Universal Exposition of Seville]], [[Seville]], [[Spain]], (1992)]]
Calatrava's early career was dedicated largely to bridges and train stations, the designs for which elevated the status of civil engineering projects to new heights. His elegant and daring [[Montjuic Communications Tower]] in [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]] (1991) in the heart of the 1992 Olympic site was a turning point in his career, leading to a wide range of commissions. The Quadracci Pavilion (2001) of the [[Milwaukee Art Museum]] was his first US building. Calatrava’s entry into [[high-rise]] design began with an innovative 54 story high twisting tower, called [[Turning Torso]] (2005), located in [[Malmö]], [[Sweden]].


==First projects and international attention==
Calatrava is currently designing the future train station - [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]] - at [[Ground Zero]] in New York City.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px">
File:Zürich Stadelhofen in 2006.jpg|[[Zürich Stadelhofen railway station]] in [[Zurich]]. Switzerland (1983–90)
File:Bahnhof Stadelhofen.jpg|Interior of the [[Zürich Stadelhofen railway station]] in [[Zurich]]. Switzerland (1983–90)
File:15-10-28-Pont Bac de Roda Barcelona-RalfR-WMA 3102.jpg|The [[Bac de Roda Bridge]] in Barcelona, Spain (1984–87): Calatrava's first bridge
File:15-10-28-Pont Bac de Roda Barcelona-RalfR-WMA 3107.jpg|The [[Bac de Roda Bridge]] in Barcelona, Spain (1984–87)
File:Puente Lusitania sobre el río Guadiana, Mérida.jpg|[[Lusitania Bridge]], [[Mérida, Spain]] (1988–91)
File:Calatrava Puente del Alamillo Seville.jpg|[[Puente del Alamillo]] [[Seville Expo '92|Expo 92]], [[Seville]], Spain (1992)
</gallery>
As soon as Calatrava completed his doctorate in 1981, he opened his own office in Zurich. He designed an exposition hall, a factory, a library, and two bridges, but none were built, Finally in 1983, he began to receive commissions for industrial and transportation structures of increasingly greater size; he designed and built the ''Entrepôt Jakem'', a warehouse in [[Münchwilen, Thurgau]], Switzerland, another warehouse in [[Coesfeld-Lette]], Germany, an addition to the main post office in [[Lucerne]], Switzerland; a bus shelter in [[Saint-Gall]], Switzerland (1983–85) the roof of a school in [[Wohlen]], Switzerland (1983–88), and then some major projects; a new hall for the railway station in Lucerne (1983–89) and then an entire train station, the [[Zürich Stadelhofen railway station]] in Switzerland (1983–1990). The train station has several of the features that became signatures of his work; straight lines and right angles are rare. The railroad platforms curve, the supporting columns lean, the concrete walls of the modernistic cavern beneath the tracks are everywhere pierced with teardrop shaped skylights, and tilting glass panels provide light and shelter without enclosing the platforms.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=91}}


In 1984–87, he built his first bridge, the [[Bac de Roda Bridge]] in Barcelona, Spain, which for the first time brought him international notice. The bridge, designed for cyclists and pedestrians, connects two parts of the city by crossing a wasteland of railway tracks. It is {{convert|128|m|ft}} long, with twin arches which lean at an angle of thirty degrees; a feature which quickly became the stylistic signature of Calatrava. The upper portion of the bridge, composed of steel arches and cables, is light and airy, like a network of lace, anchored to the massive concrete supports and granite pillars below.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=91}}
Calatrava’s style has been heralded as bridging the division between [[structural engineering]] and [[architecture]]. In this, he continues a tradition of Spanish modernist engineering that includes [[Félix Candela]] and [[Antonio Gaudí]]. Nonetheless, his style is very personal and derives from numerous studies he makes of the human body and the natural world.


His next bridge, the [[Puente del Alamillo]] (1987–1992), in Seville, Spain, was even more spectacular and cemented his reputation. Built as part of the 1992 [[Seville Expo '92|Expo 92]], it is {{convert|200|m|ft}} long, crossing the Meandro San Jeronimo River. Its main feature is a single pylon {{convert|142|m|ft}} high, leaning to 58 degrees, the same angle as the [[Great Pyramid of Giza]] in Egypt. The weight of the concrete of the pylon is sufficient to hold up the bridge with just thirteen pairs of cables, eliminating the need for any cables behind it.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=3}}
===Calatrava as sculptor===
Calatrava is also a prolific [[sculpture|sculptor]] and [[Painting|painter]], claiming that the practice of architecture combines all the arts into one. In 2003, the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] in New York City held an exhibition of his artistic work, entitled "Santiago Calatrava: Sculpture Into Architecture." Exhibitions of his work have also taken place in Germany, England, Spain, Italy and elsewhere.


==Projects of the 1990s==
[[Image:Santiago calatravas milwaukee art museum panorama.jpg|thumb|center|700px|The [[Milwaukee Art Museum]] in [[Milwaukee]], [[Wisconsin]], USA.]]
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px">
File:Torre de comunicacions de Montjuic1 - Barcelona (Catalunya).jpg|[[Montjuïc Communications Tower]], Barcelona (1989–92)
File:Flickr - paul bica - arches.jpg|Atrium of [[Brookfield Place (Toronto)]], Ontario, Canada (1992)
File:Llotja de Sant Jordi 2.jpg|[[Llonja de Sant Jordi]], [[Alcoy]] (Alicante), Spain (1992–95)
File:OrienteMGT.jpg|[[Gare do Oriente]], Lisbon, Portugal (1998)
File:Bilbao Airport ATC (Air Traffic Control) - LEBB.jpg|[[Bilbao Airport]] control tower (1990–2000)
File:Bilbao Airport, July 2010 (03).JPG|[[Bilbao Airport]] Passenger Terminal (1990–2000)
File:Aeropuerto Bilbao Loiu 01.jpg|[[Bilbao Airport]] Passenger Terminal (1990–2000)
</gallery>
At the beginning of the 1990s, Calatrava built several remarkable railway stations and bridges, but broadened his portfolio by designing a wider range of structures, including a Canadian shopping center, a new passenger terminal for Bilbao airport, and his first building in the United States, the new structure of the [[Milwaukee Art Museum]]. In 1992, he completed one of his most picturesque and sculptural works, the [[Montjuïc Communications Tower]] in Barcelona (1989–92), a {{convert|136|m|ft|abbr=on}}-high graceful concrete spire designed for the site of the [[1992 Summer Olympics|1992 Olympics]]. The concrete pylon leans backwards, and seems to grasp the vertical broadcast antennas. Its form suggests an athlete about to throw a javelin. The circular building at the base of the tower, which contains the broadcast equipment, is clad in white bricks and is equipped with metal resembling an eye which opens and closes. The building has a particularly Catalan touch, borrowed from the park benches of [[Park Güell]] of [[Antonio Gaudi]]: a decoration of colorful ceramics tiles. The square next to it is laid out like a giant sundial, on which the tower casts its shadow. In 1992, he also finished his first North American project, the [[Allen Lambert Galleria]] in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The interior of the shopping mall is covered by a glass roof supported by columns like gigantic trees, a modern version of the [[Belle Epoque]] [[Les Halles]] market in Paris.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=33}}


===Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry (1989–1994) and the Eastern Train Station in Lisbon (1992–98)===
===Recognition===
Two years later, in 1994, he completed another notable train station, the [[Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry]] (1989–1994) at the Lyon airport in [[Satolas]]. This building was designed to be both a functional link between the airport and train station, the terminal for the high-speed [[TGV]] trains, and a symbol of the [[Rhone-Alps]] Region. The station is covered by a giant shell of steel and glass, {{convert|120|by|100|m|ft}}, suspended at a maximum height of {{convert|40|m|ft}}, and weighing {{convert|1300|t}}. It is connected with the airport terminal by a {{convert|180|m|ft}} long glass and concrete bridge. The glass and steel sides and skylights of the terminal from the inside resemble a modernistic cathedral; the glass panels at the top are intended to suggest flight. From the outside, the station has been said to resemble a prehistoric animal, while the glass-and-steel bridge has been compared to a bird or a [[manta ray]].{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=33}}
Calatrava has received numerous recognitions. In 1990 he received the "Médaille d´Argent de la Recherche et de la Technique", Paris. In 1992 he received the prestigious Gold Medal from the [[Institution of Structural Engineers]]. In 1993, the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in [[New York]] held a major exhibition of his work called “Structure and Expression." In 1998 he was elected to become a member of "Les Arts et Lettres," in Paris. In 2004, he received the Gold Medal from the [[American Institute of Architects]] (AIA).


The [[Gare do Oriente]], or eastern train station, was constructed for the [[1998 Lisbon World Exposition]], and is located in a former industrial area. It was designed to bridge the wasteland which separated the residential area of the city from the [[Tagus River]]. Similar to the galleria he designed in Toronto, but on a grander scale, the interior of the station features a forest of white columns like gigantic trees that support the glass roof, {{convert|238|by|78|m|ft}}, which covers the eight tracks. The station complex also includes a shopping center, and transport links by tram and metro to the center of the city. With its multiple arches and curves, the structure appears to be moving and ready to take off.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=53}}
In 2005, Calatrava was awarded the [[Eugene McDermott]] Award by the Council for the Arts of [[MIT]]. The Award is among the most esteemed arts awards in the US. <ref>Established to honor Eugene McDermott, founder of [[Texas Instruments]] and long-time friend and benefactor to MIT, the award was created by the Council for the Arts at [[MIT]] in 1974, and further endowed by Eugene's wife, Margaret. Since its inception, the Council has bestowed the award upon 31 individuals producing creative work in the performing, visual and media arts, as well as authors, art historians and patrons of the arts.</ref>


===Bilbao Airport (1990–2000)===
<gallery>
One of his last projects in the 20th century was the [[Bilbao Airport]] in Spain, notable both for its unusual control tower, {{convert|42|m|ft}} high – made of concrete clad with aluminum, which widens as it grows taller, and which resembles a statue holding its hands in front of it – and for terminal buildings, where the white concrete structures are united with aluminum forms. The terminal buildings themselves lift upwards and seem to be trying to take off, giving them the airport the popular nickname of "The Dove".
Image:Auditoriotenerife.jpg|Auditorio de Tenerife, [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]], [[Canary Islands]], Spain.

Image:BCE Place Galleria Toronto Panorama 2002 cropped.jpg|The interior of the [[BCE Place]] Galleria, [[Toronto]], Canada (1992).
==Museums, concert halls and skyscrapers (2000–2010)==
Image:Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències - L'Umbracle.jpg|''L'Umbracle'' at the [[Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències]] in [[Valencia, Spain|Valencia]], Spain (1996).
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Image:Hemispheric - Valencia, Spain - Jan 2007.jpg|Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències, Valencia, Spain (1996).
Image:Milwaukee Art Museum 1 (Mulad).jpg|[[Milwaukee Art Museum]] in [[Milwaukee]], [[Wisconsin]], USA (2001)
File:Milwaukee Art Museum exterior.jpg|The [[Milwaukee Art Museum]] in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1994–2001)
File:Calatrava Movie.ogv|The [[Milwaukee Art Museum]] Brise-Soleil
Image:Gare Oriente Lisboa.JPG |[[Estação do Oriente]], [[Lisbon]], Portugal (1998)
File:Bodegas Ysios, junio de 2007 (4).jpg|Bodegas Ysios winery in Laguardia, Spain (1998–2001)
Image:Olympic stadium.JPG|[[Athens Olympic Sports Complex|Olympic Sports Complex]], Athens (1999-2004)
File:Auditorio de Tenerife, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, España, 2012-12-15, DD 02.jpg|[[Auditorio de Tenerife]] in the [[Canary Islands]] (1991–2003)
Image:The Turning Torso, Malmo.JPG|[[Turning Torso]] in [[Malmö]], Sweden (2005)
File:Turningtorsomalmö.jpg|[[Turning Torso]] in [[Malmö, Sweden]] (1999–2004)
<!-- Unsourced image removed: Image:Montjuic_Communications_Tower.jpg|[[Montjuic]] Communications Tower in [[Barcelona]], Spain (1992) {{deletable image-caption|1={{subst:#time:l, j F Y| + 7 days}}}} -->
File:Sciences museum of valencia.jpg|[[Museu de les Ciències Príncipe Felipe|Science Museum]] in [[Valencia, Spain]] (1994–2000)
Image:Calatrava Jerusalem.jpg|[[Chords Bridge]] for pedestrians and train in [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]] (2008)
File:ValenciaHemisphere2corr.jpg|The City of Arts and Sciences in [[Valencia, Spain]] (1991–2006)
Image:Panorama Sept 2008.jpg|[[Liège-Guillemins railway station]], [[Liège (city)|Liège]], Belgium (2009).
File:Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía 12042006.jpg|Palace of the Arts in Valencia (2006)
File:Liège Luik Lüttich (4411635751).jpg|[[Liège-Guillemins railway station]], [[Liège]], [[Belgium]] (2009)
</gallery>
</gallery>
Following 2000, Calatrava completed a new addition to the [[Milwaukee Art Museum]], a [[Auditorio de Tenerife|concert hall]] in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, a [[Turning Torso|twisting skyscraper]] in Malmö, Sweden, and a City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia, Spain. in Sweden, and a wooden castle-like winery in Spain, all in astonishing forms and all seemingly in motion.


===Milwaukee Art Museum (1994–2001)===
==Recent projects==
The [[Quadracci Pavilion]] of the [[Milwaukee Art Museum]] (1994–2001) was Calatrava's first building in the United States, and his first museum. It displayed the technical innovations and forms he had first used in his railway stations and airports, but with more freedom of form and architectural theatrics. It is an addition to an existing building, constructed by [[Eero Saarinen]] in 1957 next to [[Lake Michigan]], with a later addition in 1975 by David Kahler. The purpose of the new pavilion, as defined by the museum board, was to give the museum a new entrance, and especially "to redefine the identity of the museum with a strong image." Calatrava's design was selected after a competition entered by seventy-seven architects. Calatrava's solution was a glass and steel entry hall {{convert|2|m|ft}} high with a moveable sun screen roof, composed of two large wings made up of twenty-six smaller wings, from {{convert|8|to|32|m|ft}} in length. The sunscreen, weighing {{convert|115|t}}, can be hoisted up by a single pylon, like an enormous bird's wing, or lowered when the wind from the lake is stronger than {{convert|65|kph|kn}}. The interior of the structure has a conference hall, exposition space, shops, and a restaurant overlooking the lake. He also designed a suspension footbridge between the center of the city and edge of the lake.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=57}}
One of his newest projects is a residential [[skyscraper]] named [[80 South Street]] after its own address, composed of 10 [[townhouse]]s in the shape of cubes stacked on top of one another. The townhouses move up a main beam and follow a ladder-like pattern, providing each townhouse with its own roof. The "townhouse in the sky" design has attracted a high profile clientele, willing to pay the hefty [[USD|US$]]30 million for each cube. It is planned to be built in [[New York City]]'s financial district facing the [[East River]]. As of 2008 this project had been canceled; the Manhattan real estate market had gone soft, and none of the ten multi-million dollar townhouses had been sold.


===Bodegas Ysios winery (1998–2001)===
He has also designed the approved [[skyscraper]], the [[Chicago Spire]], in [[Chicago]]. Originally commissioned by Chicagoan Christopher Carley, Irish developer [[Garrett Kelleher]] purchased the building site for the project in July 2006 when Carley's financing plans fell through. Construction of the building began in August 2007 for completion in 2011. When completed, the Chicago Spire, at 2,000 feet tall, will be the tallest building in North America.
The Bodegas Ysios winery in [[Laguardia, Álava|Laguardia]], Spain (1998–2001) was designed as a symbol of the [[Rioja (wine)|Rioja]] wines made by that winery. Built on a sloping site surrounded by vineyards, the {{convert|196|m|ft|adj=on}} long building has an aluminum roof and a facade covered with laminated wood panels, alternating between convex and concave, with a roofline that ripples like a series of waves.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|pages=63–65}}


===Auditorio de Tenerife (1991–2003)===
Calatrava has also designed three bridges that will eventually span the [[Trinity River (Texas)|Trinity River]] in [[Dallas, Texas|Dallas]]. Construction of the first bridge, named after donor Margaret Hunt Hill, has been repeatedly delayed due to high costs, a fact that has sparked much controversy and criticism. If and when completed, Dallas will join the Dutch county of [[Haarlemmermeer]] in having three Calatrava bridges.
The [[Auditorio de Tenerife]], Tenerife, in the [[Canary Islands]], is a concert hall with 1558 seats and a smaller chamber music hall of 428 seats. With a curving concrete cupola {{convert|60|m|ft}} high, crowned by a curving roof like a breaking wave, it dominates the city square and old town below. The shell is covered with ceramic tiles and the pavement and most of the floors are made of the local basalt stone. The unusual sculptural form of the building gives it a completely different appearance depending upon from where it is viewed. {{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|pages=63–65}}


===Turning Torso (1999–2004)===
Santiago Calatrava was also recently hired to design Peace Bridge, a 130m pedestrian bridge to span the Bow River in downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The bridge will cost approximately $24.5 million. The project was approved by city council in early January 2009 and is scheduled for completion in fall 2010. Public disclosure of Peace Bridge was made on July 28, 2009 to the public and praised as a sleek, elegant contribution to downtown Calgary. The design showed a sleek, tubular, single span red and white trestle, offering separate pathways for cyclists and pedestrians. The bridge is expected to serve 5,000 pedestrians and cyclists daily.
The [[Turning Torso]] in [[Malmö]], Sweden, was Calatrava's first skyscraper, and was the first twisting skyscraper, a form which later appeared in other cities around the world from Shanghai to Moscow. The building was originally conceived by the architect as a sculpture of "seven cubes stacked on a steel support creating a spiral structure resembling a twisting spinal column." {{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=67}} The tower is {{convert|190|m|ft}} high, and twists a full ninety degrees from the base to the top. Each of the nine cubes cube is like a separate five-story building; each floor contains from one to five apartments. The support holding the structure together is the column of elevators and escalators which communicate between the cubes. A system of discreet cross beams on the exterior frame manage the torsion of the twisting building. In 2016, it was the tallest building in Scandinavia.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=67-69}}


===Athens Olympic Sports Complex (2001–2004)===
On June 16, 2009, it was announced that Calatrava would be designing the first building of the new University of South Florida Polytechnic campus in Lakeland Florida. This will be his first work in the southeastern United States.
For the [[2004 Olympic Games]] in Athens, Greece, Calatrava won the commission to cover the existing stadium with a new roof, to make a similar roof for the velodrome, and additionally to build four entrance gateways, a monumental sculpture to symbolize the games, and other architectural features to give harmony and variety to the complex. The roof for the stadium, in the form of bent "leaves" of laminated glass, is designed to reflect 90 percent of the sunlight. The roof covers {{convert|25000|m2|ft2}}, and is supported by double-tied arches of tubular steel, with a span of {{convert|304|m|ft}} and a height of {{convert|60|m|ft}}. It is {{convert|250|m|ft}} long and {{convert|20|m|ft}} high, suspended by cables from two parabolic arches. The Velodrome has a white cap supported by two concrete arches {{convert|45|m|ft}} high, weighing {{convert|4000|t}}, from which the glass and steel roof is suspended. Calatrava also designed an enormous parabolic arch at the entrance and the Wall of Nations, a mobile sculpture of tubular steel which moves in a wavelike patterns.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.arcspace.com/features/santiago-calatrava/athens-olympic-sports-complex/|publisher=Arcspace.com|title=Athens Olympics Sports Complex|access-date=4 February 2017}}</ref>


===City of Arts and Sciences and Opera House in Valencia (1991–2006)===
[[Image:Bahnhof Stadelhofen.20060404-193358.jpg|thumb|[[Zürich Stadelhofen|Bahnhof Stadelhofen]] in Zürich.]]
The largest group of buildings by Calatrava is found in his birthplace, Valencia, Spain, and was built in over a decade. It includes the [[City of Arts and Sciences]] (1991–2000) and the [[Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía|Opera house]] (1996–2006), all constructed on a plot of 35 hectares between a highway and a river on the east side of the city. The L'Hemisfèric, like a half-sunken globe, is placed in the centre, next to a large artificial lake, in which it seems to be sinking. The dome is covered by a metal screen which opens and closes, and the entrance opens like a human eye. On one side is the [[Museu de les Ciències Príncipe Felipe|science museum]], behind a line of leaning columns, and on the other is the newest structure, the massive shell of the opera house, described by Calatrava as a "monumental sculpture", which gives the impression of being continually in motion.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=47-51}}
[[Image:Auditorio de Tenerife Seitlich.jpg|thumb|[[Tenerife]] Opera House, Canary Islands, Spain (Auditorium of Tenerife)]]


===Liège-Guillemins railway station (2009)===
==Criticism==
The [[Liège-Guillemins railway station]] for high-speed trains in [[Liège]], [[Belgium]] is covered with a lace-like roof of glass and steel {{convert|160|m|ft}} long and {{convert|32|m|ft}} high, covering the nine tracks and five platforms. The transparent roof seems to eliminate the distinction between indoors and outdoors.{{Sfn|Taschen|Taschen|2016|page=108}}


== Recent major projects (2011–) ==
Calatrava's work in [[Bilbao]] has been criticized for impracticality.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
[[Bilbao Airport|The airport]] lacks facilities and [[Zubizuri|the bridge]]'s glass tiles are prone to break and get slippery under the local weather.<ref name="ElCorreo20070224">''[http://www.elcorreodigital.com/vizcaya/prensa/20070224/vizcaya/entre-losetas-arquitectos-estrellas_20070224.html Entre losetas y y arquitectos 'estrellas']'', El Correo, 24 February 2007.</ref>
File:24. Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos Ciudad de Oviedo (36143894075).jpg|Palace of Congresses in [[Oviedo]], Spain (2000–2011)
In 2007, Calatrava sued Bilbao<ref name="ElCorreo20070222">''[http://www.elcorreodigital.com/vizcaya/prensa/20070222/portada_viz/calatrava-lleva-tribunales-guerra_20070222.html Calatrava lleva a los tribunales su guerra con Isozaki por los puentes de Uribitarte]'', [[El Correo]], 22 February 2007.</ref> for allowing [[Arata Isozaki]] to remove a bar from the bridge to connect it to the [[Isozaki Atea]] towers. The judge ruled against Calatrava, on the ground that, although the building design is protected by the intellectual property law, public safety is more important than intellectual property.<ref name="ElMundo20071126">''[http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2007/11/26/cultura/1196074184.html El juez absuelve al Ayuntamiento de Bilbao de la demanda interpuesta por Santiago Calatrava]'', [[El Mundo (Spain)|El Mundo]], 26 November 2007.</ref>. In a 2009 appeal he received 30.000€ in compensation. The Isozaki joint has been cited as bold and destructive.
File:The Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge.jpg|[[Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge]] in Dallas, Texas (2012)
File:The Peace Bridge in Calgary an HDR photo.jpg|[[Peace Bridge (Calgary)|Peace Bridge]] in Calgary, Canada (2012)
File:Florida Polytechnic University (25811685378).jpg|The Innovation, Science, and Technology (IST) Building of the [[Florida Polytechnic University]] (2014)
File:Florida_Polytechnic_University_-_Inside.jpg|Interior of the Innovation, Science and Technology (IST) building at [[Florida Polytechnic University]] (2014)
File:Museudoamanha abr.jpg|[[Museum of Tomorrow]], Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2015)
File:Museu do Amanhã em sua inauguração 01.jpg|[[Museum of Tomorrow]] in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2015)
File:The Oculus - NYC (51521542401).jpg|The [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]] in New York City (2016)
File:Dey Street Concourse (27374600280).jpg|Interior of the Oculus of the [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]] (2016)
</gallery>


===Oviedo Conference Center (2000–2011)===
Calatrava gifted the Municipality of [[Venice]] with the project of a new bridge on the "Canal Grande" in 1996. As of 2007, the project was still under construction. and has gone through numerous structural changes, because of the mechanical instability of the structure and the excessive weight of the bridge,<ref name="LaRepubblica20070507">''[http://www.repubblica.it/2007/05/sezioni/cronaca/venezia-calatrava/venezia-calatrava/venezia-calatrava.html]'',La Repubblica, 07 May 2007.</ref> which would cause the bank of the canal to fail. In 10 years the project has been inspected by more than 8 different consultants and the cost has raised up to three times the original expectations;<ref name="L'Espresso20070508">''[http://espresso.repubblica.it/dettaglio-local/Ponte-di-Calatrava-il-giallo-della-lettera/1598648/6]'',L'Espresso, 08 May 2007.</ref>. The work was completed in August 2008.
The conference center and exposition hall in the Spanish city of [[Oviedo]] combines two office buildings and a hotel, covered with horizontal bands of glass and steel and perched upon curving concrete pylons, with elliptical conference center, which includes a main theater, exposition hall and seminar rooms. The Center include another signature feature of Calatrava's work; a sunscreen that was supposed to be able to fold and unfold, but was never functional. The ceiling of the concert hall is an ascending series of arcs, which echo the curving rows of seats.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|pages=70–71}}


===Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge (2007–2012) and Peace Bridge (2008–2012)===
The train station [[Gare do Oriente]] in [[Lisbon]] is known for being very uncomfortable, especially with wind and rainy weather.{{By whom|date=March 2009}}{{Fact|date=March 2009}}
Calatrava constructed a series of extraordinary bridges, the type of structure which originally brought him global attention, for cities around the world that wanted a symbol of modernity and daring. Among the largest and dramatic are three bridges over the [[Trinity River (Texas)|Trinity River]] in [[Dallas]], Texas. The first of these was the [[Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge]], opened for traffic in March 2012. The bridge, carrying six lanes of traffic, is {{convert|209|m|ft}} long, with the appearance of being<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dallasobserver.com/news/trinity-trust-foundation-looking-for-a-construction-manage-10790508|title=No, Really. Not Joking. Huge Arches on McDermott Bridge Are Fake. Go Figure.|first=Jim|last=Schutze|website=Dallas Observer}}</ref> suspended from an arc-shaped tubular steel pylon forty stories or {{convert|136|m|ft}} high by fifty-eight cables, ranging in length from {{convert|119|to|196|m|ft}}. In form, the bridge resembles one of three bridges constructed in 2005–2005 on the [[Autostrada A1 (Italy)|Autostrada A1]] in [[Reggio Emilia]], Italy.<ref>{{cite web|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170102072136/http://www.dmagazine.com/frontburner/2011/06/is-our-calatrava-bridge-a-copy-of-reggio-emilias/|archive-date=2 January 2017|url=http://www.dmagazine.com/frontburner/2011/06/is-our-calatrava-bridge-a-copy-of-reggio-emilias/|title=Is Our Calatrava Bridge a Copy of Reggio Emilia's?|last=Rogers|first=Tim|work=FrontBurner|date=22 June 2011|publisher=D Magazine Partners, Inc.|location=Dallas, Texas|access-date=2 January 2017}}</ref><ref name=completion>{{cite web|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130407054805/http://www.domusweb.it/en/architecture/2012/03/07/building-as-icon.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=7 April 2013|url=http://www.domusweb.it/en/architecture/2012/03/07/building-as-icon.html|title=Building As Icon: Santiago Calatrava's first completed bridge in the United States evokes Eero Saarinen's Gateway Arch in shape and motivation|work=Domus|date=7 March 2012|last=Rago|first=Danielle|location=Dallas, Texas|
access-date=2 January 2017}}</ref> Work on the second bridge, the [[Margaret McDermott Bridge]], began in 2011.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=93}}

The [[Peace Bridge (Calgary)|Peace Bridge]] in Calgary, Canada, built between 2008 and 2012, is a completely different bridge in purpose, scale and design. Built across the [[Bow River]], and designed for pedestrians and cyclists, it is a glass and stew-wrapped tube {{convert|126|m|ft}} long. It appears extraordinary long for a bridge with no towers or pylons to hold it up. Calatrava described the form in his own particular engineering vocabulary as "defined by a helicoidal movement, with an ovoid cross section, with two clearly materialized tangential lanes expressing an internal architectural volume." {{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=81}}

===Florida Polytechnic University (2009–2014)===
The project for the new [[Florida Polytechnic University]] in [[Lakeland, Florida]] (2009–2014) gave Calatrava the opportunity to design an entire campus in a unified style. The site covers {{convert|170|acres|ha}} of land which once contained phosphorus mines, many of which have been filled with water creating small lakes.Calatrava's plan combined several small lakes into a central lake, which serves as a setting for the central structure, the [[Florida Polytechnic University#Innovation, Science, and Technology (IST) Building|Innovation, Science, and Technology (IST) building]]. The eye-shaped central building has an area of 200,000 square feet on two floors, and contains all the classrooms, faculty offices laboratories and public spaces until the other buildings are completed. The building has several signature Calatrava features, including an extendable sun scene on the roof, which entirely changes the appearance of the building when deployed, and whose form changes gradually as the sun moves. The terraces of the building are covered by a curving pergola, or screen, of steel, which reduces the direct sunlight by thirty percent. Inside, the corridors and central courtyard are lit by the central skylight. Plans for the building call for the installation of {{convert|1860|m2|ft2}} of solar panels on the sunscreen to provide energy for the building. The library of the university is also distinctive; it does not have a single book; all the collection is digitized.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=83}}

The structure has been called by some journalists a response to the criticism of the high price and technical flaws of some of Calatrava's earlier buildings. The review in ''[[Architecture: the AIA journal|Architecture]]'' magazine, the journal of the American Institute of Architects, reported: "The building is full of handsome and even some very impressive spaces, but none of the singularly breathtaking ones that have made Calatrava, despite his price tag, so attractive to clients looking for marketing splash to go with their museum wing or train station. It reflects serious attention to detail and the bottom line; this is the work of an architect actively trying to prove, or at least re-emphasize, his bona fides."<ref name="Hawthorne 2014">{{cite web | last=Hawthorne | first=Christopher | title=Florida Polytechnic University, Designed by Santiago Calatrava | website=Architect | date=13 October 2014 | url=http://www.architectmagazine.com/design/buildings/florida-polytechnic-university-designed-by-santiago-calatrava_o | access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref>

===Museum of Tomorrow, Rio de Janeiro (2010–2015)===
The [[Museum of Tomorrow]] in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which opened in December 2015, is part of the redevelopment of the waterfront of Rio de Janeiro, and opened in time for the [[2016 Summer Olympics]] in that city. The building is sited on a {{convert|7600|m2|ft2}} plaza next to the harbor, and surrounded by reflecting pools. The building is [[cantilever]]ed {{convert|75|m|ft}} over the plaza, and {{convert|45|m|ft}} toward the sea. and gives the impression that it is floating on the water. Calatrava wrote, "The idea is that the building feels ethereal, almost floating on the sea, like a ship, a bird or a plant." The roof is equipped with moveable screens that adjust to the movements of the sun. The interior design is what Calatrava calls "archetypal" and simplified, to allow for exhibits in a greater variety of forms and sizes.

The museum also includes a number of ecological features; water from the sea is used to regulate the temperature inside the building, and to refill the surrounding reflecting pools.<ref name="Rosenfield 2015">{{cite web | last=Rosenfield | first=Karissa | title=Santiago Calatrava's Museum of Tomorrow Opens in Rio de Janeiro | website=ArchDaily | date=17 December 2015 | url=http://www.archdaily.com/778998/santiago-calatravas-museum-of-tomorrow-opens-in-rio-de-janeiro | access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Murdock |first=James |date=10 October 2010 |title=Calatrava's "Museum of Tomorrow" to Showcase a Greener Future for Rio |url=http://archrecord.construction.com/news/daily/archives/2010/10/101004calatrava_museum_tomorrow.asp |newspaper=Architectural Record |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref> ''[[The Guardian]]'' described it as "an other-worldly edifice that looks like a cross between a solar-powered dinosaur and a giant air conditioning unit", and declared "it must already rank as one of the world's most extraordinary buildings."<ref name="Watts 2015">{{cite web | last=Watts | first=Jonathan | title=Museum of Tomorrow: a captivating invitation to imagine a sustainable world | website=The Guardian | date=17 December 2015 | url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/17/museum-of-tomorrow-rio-de-janeiro-brazil-sustainability | access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref>

===WTC Hub, New York City (2003–2016)===
Calatrava designed the [[World Trade Center station (PATH)|WTC Transportation Hub]] in New York City at the rebuilt [[World Trade Center site#Towers|World Trade Center]] at the site of the [[September 11 attacks]] in 2001. The new station connects the regional trains of the new [[PATH (rail system)|PATH]] with the subway and other local transportation, and also has a large retail mall, replacing commercial space destroyed in the attack. The above-ground "oculus" of the station, made of glass and steel, is oval-shaped, and is {{convert|35|m|ft}} long and {{convert|29|m|ft}} high. According to Calatrava, it resembles "a bird flying from the hands of a child".{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=77}} The "Wings" of the above-ground structure were originally designed to move upward to a maximum height of {{convert|51|m|ft}} to form a double screen {{convert|51|m|ft}} high, but this feature had to be dropped to meet new security standards. The main hall of the station is {{convert|10|m|ft}} underground, and the tracks of the PATH system on another level {{convert|8|m|ft}} below. The underground station was originally designed so that its roof would open entirely in good weather, but this feature also had to be dropped due to its cost and space limitations.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=77}}

The WTC Hub has been controversial because of its cost (4&nbsp;billion dollars, twice the original estimate, and the most expensive railway station ever built) and its delays (seven years on 3 March 2016, seven years behind schedule). More than $1&nbsp;billion of its cost went to administrative expenses and the decision to build around the [[1 (New York City Subway service)|1 train]] of the [[New York City Subway]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.businessinsider.com/wtc-transportation-hub-is-4-billion-2014-12|title=Why The World Trade Center Transportation Hub Is Going To Cost $4 Billion|newspaper=Business Insider|access-date=4 February 2017}}</ref><ref name="NYT story">{{cite news|last=Daley|first=Suzanne|title=A Star Architect Leaves Some Clients Fuming|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/25/arts/design/santiago-calatrava-collects-critics-as-well-as-fans.html|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=13 September 2013|access-date=13 September 2013}}</ref> Michael Kimmelman, the architecture critic of the ''New York Times'', praised the soaring upward view inside the Oculus, but condemned the building's cost, "scale, monotony of materials and color, preening formalism and disregard for the gritty urban fabric."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/03/arts/design/santiago-calatravas-transit-hub-is-a-soaring-symbol-of-a-boondoggle.html|title=Santiago Calatrava's Transit Hub Is a Soaring Symbol of a Boondoggle|first=Michael|last=Kimmelman|date=2 March 2016|access-date=17 March 2017|work=The New York Times}}</ref>

==Controversy and criticism==
After years of praise and commendation, in 2013 some of Calatrava's projects began to draw criticism on the grounds of their cost, delays, and functional problems. Many of these criticisms were packaged together in an article by [[Suzanne Daley]] in the ''New York Times'' on 13 September 2013, entitled "Santiago Calatrava collects critics as well as fans."<ref name="NYT story"/>

Daley wrote: "...in numerous interviews, other architects, academics and builders say that Mr. Calatrava is amassing an unusually long list of projects marred by cost overruns, delays and litigation. It is hard to find a Calatrava project that has not been significantly over budget. And complaints abound that he is indifferent to the needs of his clients. In 2013 a Dutch councillor in Haarlemmermeer, near Amsterdam, urged his colleagues to take legal action because the three bridges the architect designed for the town cost twice the budgeted amount and then millions more in upkeep since they opened in 2004."<ref name="NYT story"/>

Much of the criticism focused on the [[City of Arts and Sciences]] in [[Valencia]], originally budgeted for about $405&nbsp;million. Ignacio Blanco, the leader of a small opposition party in Valencia, blamed Calatrava of spending nearly three times the original budget, and accused the region of paying him approximately $127&nbsp;million for his work, though the complex was originally lacking elevators for the disabled, and the opera house had 150 seats with obstructed views. In 2013 Calatrava sued his critic for defamation and won, however because the judge ruled that, although the website presented "objective truths", its name "Calatrava te la clava" (a rhyme meaning "Calatrava bleeds you dry") was "insulting and degrading".<ref name=DZM>{{cite web |title= Santiago Calatrava wins legal battle against 'insulting and degrading' website |date= 21 May 2014 |url= http://www.dezeen.com/2014/05/21/santiago-calatrava-wins-legal-battle-against-calatrava-bleeds-you-dry-website/ |publisher=De Zeen Magazine |access-date= 30 May 2014}}</ref>

[[File:Desperfectos lateral derecho, Auditorio de Tenerife, España, 2015.JPG|thumb|Missing and ill-fitting tiles on the wall of the [[Auditorio de Tenerife]] in 2015.|alt=An inclined wall covered with white pieces of ceramic under a blue sky. Some of the tiles are missing, others are detached from the wall and raise against other pieces.]]
Some of the problems with Calatrava's projects have been caused by unusual design choices and insufficient testing. The glass tiles on the floor of his bridge in Bilbao became slippery in the rain, causing an increased number of claims for injuries and forcing the installation of a black anti-slip carpet on the decking, which blocked the view of the river through the walkway. The metal arches he put over some landscaped gardens sometimes overheated in the sunshine, baking the vines that were supposed to grow on them.<ref name="Daley 2013">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/25/arts/design/santiago-calatrava-collects-critics-as-well-as-fans.html|title=Santiago Calatrava Collects Critics as Well as Fans|last=Daley|first=Suzanne|date=25 September 2013|website=The New York Times|access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref>
[[Caja Madrid Obelisk|The Caja Madrid Obelisk]] is a [[kinetic sculpture]] with an undulating movement.
However the maintenance costs are so high that it has been static since months after its inauguration in 2010.<ref name="EuropaPress">{{cite news |title=El obelisco de Calatrava seguirá siendo estático por la política de "contención del gasto" |url=https://www.europapress.es/madrid/noticia-obelisco-calatrava-seguira-siendo-estatico-politica-contencion-gasto-20140922165419.html |access-date=1 December 2023 |work=www.europapress.es |agency=Europa Press |date=22 September 2014}}</ref>
The aluminum and wood covering of a winery in Spain leaked water, interfering with the winemaking and requiring extensive repairs. The ceramic tiles on the surface of the opera house in Valencia, placed as a tribute to [[Antonio Gaudi]], buckled in the heat because concrete and ceramics expand and contract at different rates when temperatures change. Calatrava was sued for the cost of repairs on the bridge in Venice and has been condemned in court.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lainformacion.com/mundo/multa-calatrava-fiasco-puente-venecia/6510246|title=Multan al arquitecto español Calatrava por el fiasco de su puente en Venecia|last=LaInformacion|website=La Información|date=14 August 2019 |language=es|access-date=15 August 2019}}</ref>
Also the {{lang|ca|[[trencadís]]}} tiles of the Tenerife Auditorium [[buckling|buckle]] and lose adhesion.
The fixing is delayed by disputes between the Calatrava studio and the building companies.<ref name="Morales">{{cite news |last1=Morales |first1=Álvaro |title=El Auditorio de Tenerife, que costó 74 millones, en avanzado deterioro y hasta con cinta americana en su fachada |url=https://www.eldiario.es/canariasahora/tenerifeahora/santa_cruz/auditorio-tenerife-costo-74-millones-avanzado-deterioro-cinta-americana-fachada_1_11458023.html |access-date=19 June 2024 |work=ElDiario.es |date=18 June 2024 |language=es}}</ref>

===WTC Hub===
Much of the criticism focused on Calatrava's WTC Hub, which was completed in 2016 for a cost of $4&nbsp;billion, twice what was expected and seven years behind schedule. Calatrava was paid a fee of 80 million dollars.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2016/04/can-you-guess-how-much-the-nyc-paid-the-architect-of-the-most-expensive-train-station-on-earth/|title=Can You Guess How Much NYC Paid The Architect of the Most Expensive Train Station On Earth?|first=Alissa|last=Walker|date=20 April 2016 |access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref> Some of the additional cost and delay was due to additions and modifications to the original plan by the project owners, the [[Port Authority of New York and New Jersey]], rather than the architect. Calatrava's original entry pavilion was scaled back for security reasons<ref name="nytimes-hubdesign3">{{cite news|first=David W.|last=Dunlap|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/28/nyregion/28rebuild.html|title=Approval Expected Today for Trade Center Rail Hub|newspaper=The New York Times|date=28 July 2005|access-date=13 July 2008}}</ref> and the mechanism for opening the roof to the gallery below was eliminated because of budget and space restraints.<ref name="nytimes-hubdesign4">{{cite news|first=David W.|last=Dunlap|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/02/nyregion/02path.html?ex=1373083200&en=c973b8f30962888e&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink|title=Design of Ground Zero Transit Hub Is Trimmed|newspaper=The New York Times|date=2 July 2008|access-date=13 July 2008}}</ref>

Even before it opened the station was a target of criticism: the ''[[New York Post]]'' described the station in 2014 as it was being built as "a self-indulgent monstrosity" and "a hideous waste of public money". [[Michael Kimmelman]], architecture critic for ''[[The New York Times]]'', referred to the structure as "a kitsch stegosaurus".<ref name="Kimmelman">{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/kimmelman/status/539888436371787776|title=Michael Kimmelman on Twitter|last1=Kimmelman|first1=Michael|date=2 December 2014|website=Twitter|access-date=1 April 2015}}</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=April 2020}} ''[[New York (magazine)|New York]]'' magazine referred to it in 2015 as it neared completion as a "Glorious [[Boondoggle]]".<ref name="Glorious Boondoggle">{{cite journal|last=Rice|first=Andrew|date=12 March 2015|title=The Glorious Boondoggle|url=https://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2015/03/santiago-calatrava-world-trade-center-path-hub.html|journal=[[New York (magazine)|New York]]|access-date=1 April 2015}}</ref> The ''New York Post'' editorial board also described the station when it opened in 2016 as the "world's most obscenely overpriced commuter rail station – and possibly its ugliest", comparing the Oculus to a "giant gray-white space insect".<ref name="Ugliest">{{cite news|url=https://nypost.com/2016/02/23/4-billion-buys-the-worlds-ugliest-commuter-rail-stop/|title=$4 Billion Buys the World's Ugliest Commuter Rail Stop|date=23 February 2016|newspaper=New York Post|access-date=26 February 2016|author=New York Post Editorial Board}}</ref>

The Hub also had its defenders. Jimmy Stamp of ''The Guardian'' wrote: "I despised the new World Trade Center transportation hub before I even saw it. It's $2bn over budget, has suffered from construction problems and design compromises, it's seven years late and still incomplete, and its architect, Santiago Calatrava, has left a trail of lawsuits and angry clients around the world....But when I was standing on the marble floors in its enormous, gleaming central concourse two stories below street level, staring up at a clear blue sky between bone-white ribs vaulting 160ft over my head, I, like Jonah in the whale, repented – at least for the moment....We deserve grand expressions of our artistic and technological capabilities. We deserve public spaces that inspire. The Oculus is deeply flawed, but I appreciate its aspiration and grandeur.... The Oculus presents a more optimistic vision, one based less on present realities and more on future possibilities. Less ''[[Blade Runner]]'', more ''[[Star Trek]]''. By the time we get to that future, whichever one it may be, the delays and the cost and the controversies will be forgotten, but we will be left with a luminous great hall in the heart of downtown New York."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/mar/04/the-oculus-review-world-trade-center-transport-hub-new-york|title=New York's Oculus transit hub soars, but it's a phoenix with a price tag|website=[[TheGuardian.com]]|date=4 March 2016 |access-date=7 February 2017}}</ref>

===Athens Olympic Sports Complex===

In October 2023 the Greek government decided to shut down the Athens Olympic Stadium and Velodrome, which both have a roof built by Calatrava, due to stability issues posing a threat for attendees and workers.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Closing of Iconic Athens Olympic Stadium Raises Concerns Over Structural Stability |url=https://greekcitytimes.com/2023/10/03/closing-of-iconic-athens-olympic-stadium-raises-concerns-over-structural-stability/ |website=greekcitytimes.com|date=3 October 2023 }}</ref>

==Style and influences==
Calatrava has never described himself as a follower of any particular school or movement of architecture. Critics have claimed that a number of influences can be seen in his work. In the journal of the American Institute of Architects, Christopher Hawthorne wrote about his design for [[Florida Polytechnic University]], which he called "an example of Calatrava's architectural approach and creative sensibility distilled, for better and worse, to its essence. There are all the usual influences on view—the [[Eero Saarinen]] forms rendered in the [[Richard Meier]], [[FAIA]], palette—and they are remarkably legible and easy to parse here."<ref>Christopher Hawthorne, ''Architect- the Journal of the Institute of American Institute of Architects'', 13 October 2014</ref> Some other critics see his work as a continuation of [[expressionism]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/encyclopedia/people/calatrava-santiago.html|title=Calatrava, Santiago|website=infoplease.com|access-date=4 February 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://archrecord.construction.com/people/interviews/archives/0008calatrava-4.asp|title=Architectural Record – News, Continuing Ed, Products, Green Bldg|access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref> Asked about critics who classified him into different schools, Calatrava responded, "Architectural critics have not yet passed from a state of perplexity about my work."{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=8}}

Calatrava himself observed that he was particularly influenced by the work of engineers such as the Swiss [[Robert Maillart]] (1872–1940), whose work inspired him to seek simple forms which could create an emotional response.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=7}} Calatrava defined his objective this way in 2016 in a book about his work: "My major interest is the introduction of a new formal vocabulary, composed of forms adapted to our time."{{Sfn|Taschen|Taschen|2016|page=111}}

Calatrava, a sculptor, has also spoken frequently about the connection between sculpture and architecture in his work. "In sculpture, I have often used spheres, cubes and other simple forms often connected with my knowledge of engineering." He noted that his Turning Torso building had originally been conceived as a work of sculpture, and he praised the liberties taken by [[Frank Gehry]] and [[Frank Stella]] in creating sculptural art, but he also noted the differences. In 1997 he wrote that "architecture and sculpture are two rivers in which the same water flows. Think of sculpture as a pure plastic art while architecture is a plastic art which is submitted to function, taking into consideration the human scale."<ref>cited in Gonzales, Julio, ''Dessiner dans l'espace'', Skira, Kutsmuseum, Berne (1997)</ref> Calatrava also noted the influence of the sculptor [[Auguste Rodin]], citing Rodin's words in his 1914 book ''Cathedrals of France'': "The sculptor only achieves the greatness of expression in concentrating his attention on harmonic contrasts of light and shadow, exactly as an architect does."<ref>Rodin, Auguste, ''Les Cathedrals de France'', Armand Colin, Paris, 1914</ref>

Movement is also an important element in the architecture of Calatrava. He noted that many 20th century sculptors, such as [[Alexander Calder]], made sculptures that moved. He wrote his own university thesis on "The Flexibility of three-dimensional structures," and described how objects, by moving, could shift from three dimensions to two and even to one. Moving elements which folded and expanded became an important element of almost all of his projects. "Architecture itself moves", he told a biographer, "and, with a little chance, becomes a magnificent ruin".{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=11}}

==Artworks==
Calatrava is also a sculptor and painter. Some of his architectural works, most notably the [[Turning Torso]] in [[Malmö, Sweden]], were originally works of sculpture.{{Sfn|Jodidio|2016|page=19}} In 2006, the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] in New York City held a special one-man exhibition of Calatrava's drawings, sculpture, and architectural models, entitled ''Santiago Calatrava: Sculpture Into Architecture''.<ref>[http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Calatrava/architecture_more.asp The Metropolitan Museum of Art – Special Exhibitions: Santiago Calatrava: Sculpture Into Architecture] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051229184008/http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Calatrava/architecture_more.asp |date=29 December 2005 }}</ref><ref>[http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Calatrava/images.asp Images from the March 2006 Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition.] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051210025227/http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Calatrava/images.asp |date=10 December 2005 }}</ref>

In 2012, the [[Hermitage Museum]] in St. Petersburg held an exhibition of his work<ref name="QuestMovement">{{cite news |date=2 July 2012 |title='Santiago Calatrava: The Quest for Movement' Exhibition |url=http://www.archdaily.com/248664/santiago-calatrava-the-quest-for-movement-exhibition/ |newspaper=Arch Daily |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref> and this was followed up by an exhibition at the Vatican Museum in Rome.<ref name="Metomorphosis">{{cite news |date=5 December 2013 |title=Santiago Calatrava: The Metamorphosis of Space |url=http://www.archdaily.com/454797/santiago-calatrava-the-metamorphosis-of-space/ |newspaper=Arch Daily |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref> Eight of his sculptures were displayed along Park Avenue in New York City in the spring of 2015, between 52nd and 55th Streets.<ref name="DailyNews">{{cite news |last=Chaban |first=Matt |date=21 March 2014 |title=The canvas and creativity drive renowned architect Santiago Calatrava's structures |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/real-estate/santiago-calatrava-works-art-article-1.1728805 |newspaper=Daily News|location=New York |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref>

In 2024, the first comprehensive overview of Calatrava’s art was written by Nick Mafi and published by [[Hirmer Publishers|Hirmer]].<ref>{{Cite book |title=Calatrava: Art |isbn=978-3777442143 |last1=Mafi |first1=Nick |date=October 2024 |publisher=Hirmer Verlag GmbH }}</ref>


==Notable works==
==Notable works==
[[File:Santiago Calatravas Quadracci Pavilion(rear).JPG|thumb|right|[[Milwaukee Art Museum]] in [[Milwaukee]], [[Wisconsin]], U.S. (2001)]]
[[File:PM 099315 E Barcelona.jpg|thumb|right|[[Montjuïc Communications Tower]], Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain (1992)]]
[[File:19-07-12-Malmö-DJI 0765-Turning-Torso-RalfR.jpg|thumb|right|[[Turning Torso]] in [[Malmö]], Sweden (2005)]]
[[File:Calatrava Jerusalem.jpg|thumb|right|[[Chords Bridge]] for pedestrians and train in [[Jerusalem]] (2008)]]
[[File:Auditorio de Tenerife, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, España, 2012-12-15, DD 02.jpg|thumb|[[Auditorio de Tenerife]], [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]], Spain (2003)]]
[[File:WTC Hub April 2016 vc.jpg|thumb|right| [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]], New York City (2016)]]
[[File:Museu do Amanha 05 2016 Rio 2085.jpg|thumb|right|[[Museum of Tomorrow]] in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil (2015)]]

===Completed===
===Completed===
* 1983–84, Jakem Steel Warehouse, [[Münchwilen, Aargau|Munchwilen]], Switzerland
* [[Trinity Bridge (Calatrava)|Trinity Bridge]], footbridge over [[River Irwell]], [[City of Salford|Salford]], [[England]] 1995
* 1983–85, Ernsting Warehouse, [[Coesfeld]], Germany
* [[Oberbaumbrücke]], [[Berlin]], [[Germany]]1896 and rebuild and opened on the 9th November1994
* 1983–88, Wohlen High School, [[Wohlen]], Switzerland
* [[Alameda Bridge]] and metro station, [[Valencia (city in Spain)|Valencia]], [[Spain]]
* 1983–90, [[Zürich Stadelhofen railway station|Stadelhofen Railway Station]], [[Zurich]], Switzerland
* 1983-1984, Jakem Steel Warehouse, Munchwilen, [[Switzerland]]
* 1983–89, Hall of [[Lucerne railway station]], [[Lucerne]], Switzerland
* 1983-1985, Ernsting Warehouse, Coesfeld, Germany
* 1984–87, [[Bac de Roda Bridge]], Barcelona, Spain
* 1983-1988, Wohlen High School, Wohlen, Switzerland
* 1983-1990, [[Zürich Stadelhofen|Stadelhofen Railway Station]], [[Zürich]], Switzerland
* 1984–88, Barenmatte Community Center, [[Suhr, Aargau|Suhr]], Switzerland
* 1983-1989, Lucerne Station Hall, [[Lucerne]], Switzerland
* 1986–87, Tabourettli Theater, [[Basel]], Switzerland
* 1984-1987, [[Bac de Roda Bridge]], [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
* 1986–88, 9 De Octubre Bridge, [[Valencia]], Spain
* 1987–92, [[Allen Lambert Galleria]] (in [[Brookfield Place (Toronto)|Brookfield Place]]), [[Toronto]], Ontario, Canada,
* 1984-1988, Barenmatte Community Center, Suhr, Switzerland,
* 1986-1987, Tabourettli Theater, [[Basel]], Switzerland,
* 1987–96, Buchen Housing Estate, [[Würenlingen]], Switzerland
* 1987-1992, [[BCE Place]] (atrium), [[Toronto]], [[Canada]],
* 1989–98, Emergency Services Centre, [[St. Gallen]], Switzerland
* 1989-1994, [[Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry|TGV Station]] , [[Lyon]], [[France]]
* 1989–94, [[Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry|Lyon-Saint-Exupéry TGV Station]], [[Lyon]], France
* 1992, ''[[Puente del Alamillo]]'', [[Seville]], [[Spain]]
* 1989–91, La Devesa Footbridge, [[Ripoll]], Spain
* 1992, ''[[Puente de Lusitania]]'', [[Mérida, Spain|Mérida]], [[Spain]]
* 1989–95, Puerto Bridge, [[Ondarroa]], Spain
* 1989–96, Bohl Bus and Tram stop, St. Gallen, Switzerland
* 1992, [[Montjuic Communications Tower]] at the Olympic Ring, [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
* 1991–95, Alameda Bridge and Metro Station, [[Valencia (city in Spain)|Valencia]], Spain
* 1992, [[World's Fair]], Kuwaiti Pavilion, [[Seville, Spain]]
* 1991–96, [[Oberbaum Bridge]] Renovation, [[Berlin]], Germany
* 1994-1997, [[Campo Volantin Footbridge]], [[Bilbao, Spain]]
* 1992, [[Alamillo Bridge]], [[Seville]], Spain
* 1996-2009, ''[[Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències]]'', [[Valencia (city in Spain)|Valencia]], [Spain] [http://www.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=es&msa=0&msid=103295916315134076315.00045eab933932056ccb4&ll=39.456516,-0.353172&spn=0.005103,0.009645&t=h&z=17 View on the map]
* 1992, [[Lusitania Bridge]], [[Mérida, Spain|Mérida]], Spain
* 1996, [[Centro Internacional de Ferias y Congresos de Tenerife]], [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]] ([[Santa Cruz de Tenerife (province)]], [[Tenerife]], [[Canary island]], [[Spain]])
* 1992, [[Montjuic Communications Tower]] at the Olympic Ring, [[Barcelona]], Spain
* 1998, [http://www.calatrava.com/search_cat.html?iid=l14a&lang=1&a=10&p=T&s=T&id=15&iid2=l11a1b2c2d2e&r=2 Estação do Oriente] or ([[Gare do Oriente]]), [[Lisbon]], [[Portugal]]
* 1992, [[Seville Expo '92|World's Fair]], Kuwaiti Pavilion, [[Seville, Spain|Seville]], Spain
* 1998, [[Puente de la Mujer]], in the [[Puerto Madero]] barrio of [[Buenos Aires]], [[Argentina]]
* 1994, [[Mimico Creek#Mimico Creek Bridge|Mimico Creek Bridge]], [[Humber Bay Park]], Toronto, Ontario
* 2000, New terminal at [[Bilbao Airport]], [[Bilbao]], [[Spain]]
* 1994, [[Kronprinzenbrücke]], Berlin, Germany
* 2001, [[Milwaukee Art Museum]], [[Milwaukee]], [[Wisconsin]], [[United States|U.S.]] [http://www.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=es&msa=0&msid=103295916315134076315.00045eab933932056ccb4&ll=43.040109,-87.896762&spn=0.002415,0.004823&t=h&z=18 View on the map]
* 1994–97, [[Campo Volantin Footbridge]], [[Bilbao]], Spain
* 2003, [[James Joyce Bridge]], bridge over [[River Liffey]], [[Dublin]], [[Ireland]]
* 1992–95, [[Llonja de Sant Jordi]], [[Alcoy]] (Alicante), Spain
* 2003 [[:Image:Auditoriotenerife.jpg|Auditorio de Tenerife]], the architect’s first performing arts facility, [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]], [[Spain]]
* 1995, [[Trinity Bridge (Greater Manchester)|Trinity Bridge]], footbridge over [[River Irwell]] in Manchester and [[City of Salford|Salford]], Greater Manchester, England
* 2004, redesign of [[Athens Olympic Sports Complex]], [[Athens]], [[Greece]]
* 2004, [[Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay]], [[Redding, California]], USA
* 1996–2009, [[City of Arts and Sciences]], [[Valencia (city in Spain)|Valencia]], Spain
* 1996, [[Centro Internacional de Ferias y Congresos de Tenerife]], [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]], [[Tenerife]], Canary island, Spain
* 2004, Three bridges (called Harp, Cittern and Lute) [[Span (architecture)|spanning]] the main [[canal]] of the [[Haarlemmermeer]], [[Netherlands]]
* 1996–2000, Pont de l'Europe, [[Orléans]], France
* 2004, [[University of Zurich]], "Bibliothekseinbau" library remodelling, [[Zürich]], [[Switzerland]]
* 1997, Pfalzkeller Gallery, [[St. Gallen]], Switzerland
* 2005, The bridge connecting the Ovnat shopping mall and the [[Rabin Medical Center]] ([[Rabin Medical Center#Beilinson Hospital|Beilinson]]) in [[Petah Tikva]], [[Israel]]
* 2005, [[Turning Torso]], [[Malmö]], [[Sweden]]
* 1998, [[Gare do Oriente]], Lisbon, Portugal
* 1999, New York Times Capsule, U.S.A.
* 2007, 3 Bridges on the A1 Motorway and [[Treno Alta Velocità|TAV]] Railway, [[Reggio Emilia]], [[Italy]]
* 1999, Puente del Hospital, [[Murcia]], Spain
* 2008, [[Chords Bridge]] at the entrance to [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]], a light rail bridge
* 2000, New terminal at [[Bilbao Airport]], [[Bilbao]], Spain
* 2008, [[Ponte della Costituzione]] footbridge from Piazzale Roma over the [[Grand Canal of Venice|Grand Canal]], [[Venice]], [[Italy]]
* 2001, [[Milwaukee Art Museum]], [[Milwaukee]], [[Wisconsin]], US
* 2001, [[Puente de la Mujer]], in the [[Puerto Madero]] barrio of [[Buenos Aires]], Argentina
* 2001, Bodegas Ysios, [[Laguardia, Álava|Laguardia]], Spain
* 2002, Wave, in [[Dallas]], Texas at the [[Southern Methodist University]] [[Meadows Museum]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://smu.edu/newsinfo/releases/m2013.html |title=Sculpture by Santiago Calatrava to be unveiled at SMU's Meadows Museum |publisher=Southern Methodist University News |date=7 October 2002 |access-date=13 November 2013 |archive-date=24 May 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130524030307/http://smu.edu/newsinfo/releases/m2013.html |url-status=dead }}</ref>
* 2003, [[James Joyce Bridge]], bridge over [[River Liffey]], Dublin, Ireland
* 2003, [[Auditorio de Tenerife]], the architect's first performing arts facility, [[Santa Cruz de Tenerife]], Spain
* 2004, redesign of [[Athens Olympic Sports Complex]], Athens, Greece
* 2004, Katehaki Footbridge, Athens, Greece
* 2004, [[Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay]], [[Redding, California|Redding]], California, US
* 2004, Three bridges (called Harp, Cittern and Lute) [[Span (architecture)|spanning]] the main canal of the [[Haarlemmermeer]], Netherlands
* 2004, [[University of Zurich]], "Bibliothekseinbau" library remodelling, [[Zurich]], Switzerland
* 2005, The bridge connecting the Avnat shopping mall and the [[Rabin Medical Center]] ([[Beilinson Hospital|Beilinson]]) in [[Petah Tikva]], Israel
* 2005, [[Turning Torso]], [[Malmö]], Sweden
* 2007, Three bridges on the [[Autostrada A1 (Italy)|A1 Motorway]] and [[Milan–Bologna high-speed railway]], [[Reggio Emilia]], Italy
* 2008, [[Chords Bridge]] at the entrance to [[Jerusalem]], a light rail bridge, Israel
* 2008, [[Ponte della Costituzione]] footbridge from Piazzale Roma over the [[Grand Canal of Venice|Grand Canal]], Venice, Italy
* 2008–2009, [[Technion Obelisk]], monument on the [[Technion]] campus in [[Haifa]], Israel
* 2009, [[Liège-Guillemins railway station]] in [[Liège]], Belgium
* 2009, [[Samuel Beckett Bridge]], bridge over [[River Liffey]], Dublin, Ireland
* 2009, [[Caja Madrid Obelisk]], Madrid, Spain
* 2011, [[Palacio de Congresos de Oviedo]], [[Oviedo, Asturias]], Spain, [Spanish wiki: [[:es:Palacio de Congresos de Oviedo]]]
* 2011, Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos, [[Oviedo]], Spain
* 2012, [[Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge]], [[Dallas]], Texas, US
* 2012, [[Peace Bridge (Calgary)|Peace Bridge]], Calgary, Alberta, Canada
* 2013, [[Reggio Emilia AV Mediopadana railway station|Medio Padana Station]] on the [[Milan–Bologna high-speed railway]], [[Reggio Emilia]], Italy
* 2014, [[Florida Polytechnic University]], Lakeland, Florida, US
* 2015, [[Museum of Tomorrow|Museu do Amanhã]], Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
* 2016, [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]], New York City
* 2018, Crati River Bridge, [[Cosenza]], Italy
* 2021, [[Margaret McDermott Bridge]], Dallas, Texas, U.S.
* 2021, UAE Pavilion at EXPO 2020, [[Dubai]], UAE
* 2022, [[St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church]], New York City
* 2024, railway station in [[Mons, Belgium|Mons]], Belgium


=== Under construction/proposed ===
=== Under construction/proposed ===
[[Image:Guillemins-9-avril-2006.jpg|thumb|right|[[TGV]] train station in [[Liège]], [[Belgium]] - Under construction]]
[[Image:Sundialbridge1.png|thumb|right|[[Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay]] in Redding, California.]]
* [[Samuel Beckett Bridge]], [[Dublin, Ireland]]
* [[World Trade Center Transportation Hub]], [[New York City]], [[United States|U.S.]]
* [[Atlanta Symphony Center]], [[Atlanta, Georgia]], [[United States|U.S.]]
* [[Liège-Guillemins]] [[TGV]] Railway Station, [[Liège (city)|Liège]], [[Belgium]]
* Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos, [[Oviedo]], [[Spain]]
* [[Chicago Spire]], [[Chicago]], [[United States|U.S.]]
* [[Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge]], [[Dallas, Texas|Dallas]], [[Texas]], [[United States|U.S.]]
* City Entrance Bridge, also known as '[[Chords Bridge (Jerusalem)|Chords Bridge]]' [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]]
* [[80 South Street]], 835 foot tall stack of 10 condominium units on [[New York City]]'s [[East River]], starting at $27 Million each. [http://www.wirednewyork.com/forum/showthread.php?t=4612 ]
* Medio Padana [[Treno Alta Velocità|TAV]] Station, [[Reggio Emilia]], [[Italy]]
* Maastricht University Campus, [[Maastricht]], [[Netherlands]]
* [[Palma de Mallorca]]'s Opera, [[Spain]]
* High-rise buildings on stilts on the [[River Liffey]] in [[Dublin]] [http://ireland.archiseek.com/news/2007/000182.html]
* [[Caja Madrid Obelisk]], [[Madrid]], [[Spain]]
* Peace Bridge, [[Calgary, Alberta]], [[Canada]]
* New railway station in [[Mons]], [[Belgium]]
* Train Station and Two Bridges at [[Denver International Airport]]
Calatrava has also submitted designs for a number of notable projects which were eventually awarded to other designers, including the [[Reichstag (building)|Reichstag]] in Berlin and the [[East London River Crossing]].
<gallery>
Image:Chicago Spire.jpg|Calatrava's 2,000 feet (610 m) tall skyscraper the [[Chicago Spire]] in [[Chicago]], formerly named the Fordham Spire, will be the tallest building in North America when it opens in 2012.
</gallery>


;In Europe
===Never built===
* City of Sport, [[University of Rome Tor Vergata]], Italy
* 1991 Collserola communications tower in [[Barcelona]]. A tower shaped like a big white spaceship was proposed, but [[Norman Foster]] ultimately designed the tower.
* Peninsula Place, Greenwich, London (1&nbsp;billion dollar project for three towers and a footbridge)<ref name="Nayeri 2017">{{cite web | last=Nayeri | first=Farah | title=Santiago Calatrava to Design His First London Complex | website=The New York Times | date=2 February 2017 | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/02/arts/design/santiago-calatrava-london-peninsula-place.html | access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref>
* A campus building for [[Ryerson University]] in Toronto, Canada. His design was dropped for a less expensive design [http://www.emporis.com/en/il/im/?id=204286].
;In the Middle East
* New cathedral for the Diocese of [[Oakland]], California, USA. Preliminary design dropped in favor of that by local architect Craig Hartman (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, San Francisco).
* Sharq Crossing, Doha, Qatar: project for three bridges and two tunnels (postponed until after 2022)
* New bridge across [[Cávado River]], [[Barcelos]], Portugal. It was dropped due to lack of funds.
* [[Dubai Creek Tower]], [[Dubai]], UAE (ground broken, scheduled for completion in 2025; in competition for world's tallest structure)<ref name="Kim 2016">{{cite web | last=Kim | first=Soo | title=New Dubai skyscraper to surpass the world's tallest building | website=The Telegraph | date=12 October 2016 | url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/middle-east/united-arab-emirates/dubai/articles/new-dubai-skyscraper-to-surpass-the-worlds-tallest-building/ | access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref>
* Substitute bridge (''Wettstein Bridge'') across [[Rhine]] River, [[Basel]], Switzerland. It did not pass the cantonal [[Referendum#Switzerland|referendum]]. A less expensive (and arguably less innovative) bridge was built instead.
;In East Asia
* [[Yuan Ze University Building]] (Taoyuan International Conference Center), [[Taoyuan, Taiwan]].


== Awards ==
=== Abandoned ===
* [[Chicago Spire]], [[Chicago]], Illinois, United States
* 1979 August Perret Award
* 1992 London [[Institution of Structural Engineers]] Gold Medal
* 1993 [[Toronto]] Municipality Urban Design Award
* 1996 Gold Medal for Excellence in the Fine Arts from the [[Granada]] Ministry of Culture
* 1999 [[Prince of Asturias Award]] in Arts
* 2000 [[Algur H. Meadows]] Award for Excellence in the Arts from the [[Meadows School of the Arts]], [[Southern Methodist University]]
* 2006 [[Eugene McDermott]] Award in the Arts from the Council for the Arts at [[MIT]],(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
* 2006 Honorary Engineering Degree from [[Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute]]
* 2005 [[American Institute of Architects|AIA]] Gold Medal
* Designation as a Global Leader for Tomorrow by the [[World Economic Forum]] in Davos
* 2007 Awarded with the Spanish National Architecture Award


==Exhibits==
== Recognition ==
Calatrava has received numerous awards for his design and engineering work.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.calatrava.com/#/Biography/Awards?mode=english |title=Santiago Calatrava Awards |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref> In 1988, he was awarded with the [[Fazlur Khan]] International Fellowship by the [[SOM Foundation]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.somfoundation.som.com/content.cfm/Fellow?fellowid=128 |title=SOM Foundation Fellows Archive |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716103849/http://www.somfoundation.som.com/content.cfm/Fellow?fellowid=128 |archive-date=16 July 2011 }}</ref> In 1990, he received the "Médaille d'Argent de la Recherche et de la Technique", in Paris. In 1992 he received the prestigious [[Gold Medal of the Institution of Structural Engineers]]. In 1993, the [[Museum of Modern Art]] in New York held a major exhibition of his work called "Structure and Expression". In 1998 he was elected to become a member of "Les Arts et Lettres", in Paris. In 2005 he received the [[AIA Gold Medal|Gold Medal]] from the [[American Institute of Architects]] (AIA).
A special exhibition has been presented at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] through March 5, 2006 [http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Calatrava/architecture_more.asp]. [http://www.metmuseum.org/special/Calatrava/images.asp Images from the exhibition.]


In 2005, Calatrava was awarded the [[Eugene McDermott]] Award by the Council for the Arts of [[MIT]].<ref>Established to honor Eugene McDermott, founder of [[Texas Instruments]] and long-time friend and benefactor to MIT, the award was created by the Council for the Arts at [[MIT]] in 1974, and further endowed by Eugene's wife, Margaret. Since its inception, the Council has bestowed the award upon 31 individuals producing creative work in the performing, visual and media arts, as well as authors, art historians and patrons of the arts.</ref>
==Personal life==
His nephew [[Alex Calatrava]] is a professional tennis player.


He is also a Senior Fellow of the [[Design Futures Council]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.di.net/about/senior_fellows/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071106072349/http://www.di.net/about/senior_fellows/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=6 November 2007 |title=Senior Fellows – Design Futures Council |publisher=Design Intelligence |access-date=13 November 2013 }}</ref>
His two sons have or are in the process of getting advanced degrees in Engineering from the [[Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science]] at [[Columbia University]] in [[New York City]].


Calatrava has received a total of twenty-two honorary degrees in recognition of his work. In 2013, Calatrava was awarded an honorary doctorate from [[Georgia Institute of Technology]], an award that has only been given to a small number of people.<ref>{{cite news |last=Treadaway |first=Dan |date=Fall 2013 |title=Santiago Calatrava: Blurring Boundaries |url=http://www.news.gatech.edu/features/fall-2013-commencement |newspaper=Georgia Tech |access-date=29 May 2014}}</ref><ref>Herman, Lisa. [http://www.coa.gatech.edu/news/architect-john-portman-honored-council-quality-growths-four-pillars-award "Architect John Portman honored with Council for Quality Growth's Four Pillars Award"], ''Georgia Tech'', 10 November 2013. Retrieved 29 May 2014. "...Doctorate of Philosophy by Georgia Tech, an accolade only a handful of individuals have achieved..."</ref>
==See also==

*[[:Category:Santiago Calatrava structures]]
===Honorary degrees===
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|
* 1993 Honorary Degree from Universidad Politecnica de Valencia
* 1994 Honorary Degree from Heriot-Watt University
* 1994 Honorary Degree from University of Seville
* 1995 Honorary Degree from University of Salford
* 1996 Honorary Degree from University of Strathclyde
* 1997 Honorary Degree from Milwaukee School of Engineering
* 1997 [[Honoris Causa]] Degree awarded by [[Delft University of Technology]]
* 1999 [[Honoris Causa]] Degree from [[University of Cassino]]
* 1999 Honorary Degree from Lund University
* 1999 Honorary Degree from Universita degli Studi di Ferrara
* 2004 Honorary Degree from Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
* 2005 Honorary Degree from Southern Methodist University
* 2006 Honorary Engineering Degree from [[Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute]]
* 2005 Honorary Degree from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
* 2007 Honorary Engineering Degree from [[School of Engineering and Applied Science (Columbia University)|Columbia University]]
* 2008 Honorary Degree from Tel Aviv University
* 2009 Honorary Degree from Oxford University
* 2009 Honorary Degree from University Camilo Jose Cela
* 2010 Honorary Degree from Universite de Liège
* 2012 Honorary Degree from Pratt Institute
* 2013 Honorary Doctoral Degree from [[Georgia Institute of Technology]]<ref name="youtube">Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/xpb6kqBImvw Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20131217135951/http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpb6kqBImvw&gl=US&hl=en Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpb6kqBImvw|title=YouTube – Dr. Santiago Calatrava Receives Honorary Degree and Remarks|date=16 December 2013 |via=YouTube|access-date=29 April 2014}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
* 2016 Honorary Doctoral Degree from Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN) in México<ref>Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/ubajBUZUzvw Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20200426012530/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubajBUZUzvw&gl=US&hl=en Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubajBUZUzvw|title=Santiago Calatrava recibe Honoris Causa del Instituto Politécnico Nacional de México|last=AGENCIA EFE|date=10 October 2016|access-date=17 March 2017|via=YouTube}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
}}

===Other honours===
* 2011: On 10 December, Calatrava was appointed a member of the [[Pontifical Council for Culture]] for a five-year renewable term by [[Pope Benedict XVI]].<ref>[http://press.catholica.va/news_services/bulletin/news/28516.php?index=28516&lang=en NOMINA DI MEMBRI DEL PONTIFICIO CONSIGLIO DELLA CULTURA] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107142020/http://press.catholica.va/news_services/bulletin/news/28516.php?index=28516&lang=en |date=7 November 2012 }}</ref>
* 2004: Calatrava received the Golden Plate Award of the [[Academy of Achievement|American Academy of Achievement]] presented by Awards Council member [[Quincy Jones]] during the International Achievement Summit in Chicago.<ref>{{cite web|title= Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement |website=www.achievement.org|publisher=[[American Academy of Achievement]]|url= https://achievement.org/our-history/golden-plate-awards/}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title= 2004 Summit Highlights Photo: Famed Spanish architect and structural engineer, Santiago Calatrava, receives the Golden Plate Award presented by Awards Council member Quincy Jones during the 43rd annual International Achievement Summit in Chicago.|publisher= Academy of Achievement |url=https://achievement.org/summit/2004/}}</ref>
* 2004: [[Interfaith Center of New York|James Parks Morton Interfaith Award]]

==Personal life==
Calatrava resides in Zurich and New York City. Two of Calatrava's sons have completed advanced degrees in engineering from the [[Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science]] at [[Columbia University]] in New York City.<ref>{{cite web | last=Davidson | first=Justin | title=Santiago Calatrava's Three Sons | website=New York | date=28 April 2013 | url=https://nymag.com/homedesign/spring2013/gabriel-calatrava-2013-5/ | access-date=17 March 2017}}</ref> His other son obtained a law degree from Columbia University and practices at the law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP in Chicago, Illinois. <ref>{{cite web | url= https://www.kirkland.com/lawyers/c/calatrava-rafael | access-date=2 December 2024| title=Rafael A. Calatrava &#124; Professionals &#124; Kirkland & Ellis LLP}}</ref> Calatrava has one daughter who completed advanced degrees in computer science and data analytics at [[Columbia University]] in New York City.


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
===Citations===

{{Reflist}}
==Bibliography==
* {{cite book|last=Jodidio|first=Philip|title=Calatrava|language=fr|publisher=Taschen|year=2016|isbn=978-3-8365-3564-9}}
* {{cite book|last=Bony|first=Anne|title=L'Architecture Moderne|language=fr|publisher=Larousse|year=2012|isbn=978-2-03-587641-6}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Taschen|first1=Aurelia|last2=Taschen |first2=Balthazar|title=L'Architecture Moderne de A à Z|year=2016|publisher=Bibliotheca Universalis|language=fr|isbn=978-3-8365-5630-9}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Prina|first1=Francesca|last2=Demaratini|first2=Demartini|title=Petite encyclopédie de l'architecture|year=2006|language=fr|publisher=Solar|isbn=2-263-04096-X}}
* {{Cite book|last=Hopkins|first=Owen|title=Les styles en architecture- guide visuel|year=2014|publisher=Dunod|language=fr|isbn=978-2-10-070689-1}}
* {{Cite book|last=De Bure|first=Gilles|title=Architecture contemporaine- le guide|year=2015|publisher=Flammarion|language=fr|isbn=978-2-08-134385-6}}


===Further reading===
==Further reading==
* {{cite book | author=[[Alexander Tzonis|Tzonis, Alexander]] | title=Santiago Calatrava: The Poetics of Movement | publisher=Universe | year=1999 | isbn=0-7893-0360-4}}
{{sourcesstart}}
*{{cite book | author=[[Tzonis]], Alexander | title=Santiago Calatrava: The Poetics Of Movement | publisher=Universe | year=1999 | isbn=0-7893-0360-4}}
* {{cite book | author=Tzonis, Alexander | title=Santiago Calatrava: The Complete Works | publisher=Rizzoli | year=2004 | isbn=0-8478-2641-4}}
*{{cite book | author=[[Tzonis]], Alexander | title=Santiago Calatrava: The Complete Works | publisher=Rizzoli | year=2004 | isbn=0-8478-2641-4}}
{{sourcesend}}


==External links==
==External links==
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{{commonscat|Santiago Calatrava}}
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*[http://www.calatrava.com/ Official Website]

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* {{Official website|www.calatrava.com}}

Maps:
* [http://proyecto.localizarq.es/?s=calatrava Calatrava's projects on the map]
* [http://proyecto.localizarq.es/?s=calatrava Calatrava's projects on the map]
* [http://www.arti-fact.com/architect/map/108/Santiago-Calatrava Map of Santiago Calatrava Architecture]
*[http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18554 Extended profile of the architect in the NYRB, December 2005]

*[http://www.newyorker.com/critics/skyline/articles/051031crsk_skyline/ ''The New Yorker'', October 31 2005, "The Sculptor"]
Profiles:
*[http://travel.guardian.co.uk/countries/story/0,7451,1687371,00.html ''The Guardian'', January 17 2006, "The Gaudí Effect"]
* [http://www.greatbuildings.com/architects/Santiago_Calatrava.html Great Buildings On-Line: Santiago Calatrava]
*[http://www.specifier.com.au/pastissues/view/detailed/c/Wings%2CEyes%2CTrees/id/15973 Pictures and profile at Specifier]
* [http://www.trekearth.com/themes.php?thid=3596 Many pictures of Calatrava's Art on Trekearth]
* [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18554 Extended profile of the architect in the NYRB, December 2006]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20140708011424/http://www.newyorker.com/critics/skyline/articles/051031crsk_skyline/ ''The New Yorker'', 31 October 2005, "The Sculptor"]
* [http://www.triplemint.com/triplemint/2005/02/visualizing_cal.html Calatrava's 80 South Street condo design for New York]
* [http://travel.guardian.co.uk/countries/story/0,7451,1687371,00.html ''The Guardian'', 17 January 2006, "The Gaudí Effect"]
*[http://urbanity.blogsome.com/2006/06/12/obelisco-de-calatrava-en-plaza-de-castilla-madrid/ 120 meters Obelisk project in Madrid]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100217015518/http://www.specifier.com.au/pastissues/view/detailed/c/Wings,Eyes,Trees/id/15973 Pictures and profile at Specifier]
* [http://www.erasmuspc.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=168&Itemid=83 The CAC and other Urban Projects in Valencia, Spain] article at ErasmusPC
* [http://edition.cnn.com/2006/TRAVEL/03/09/valencia.qa/ CNN interview with Santiago Calatrava]
* [http://edition.cnn.com/2006/TRAVEL/03/09/valencia.qa/ CNN interview with Santiago Calatrava]
* [http://urbanity.blogsome.com/2007/01/08/palacio-de-congresos-princesa-letizia-oviedo-espana-santiago-calatrava/ Oviedo (Spain) congress center]
*[http://www.valenciavalencia.com/sights-guide/cas.htm The City of Arts and Sciences by Calatrava]


{{IStructE Gold Medal Winners}}
{{IStructE Gold Medal Winners}}
{{Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts}}
{{Authority control (arts)|country=ES}}


{{Persondata
|NAME=Calatrava, Santiago
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=engineer, architect
|DATE OF BIRTH=[[July 28]], [[1951]]
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[Valencia (city in Spain)|Valencia]], [[Spain]]
|DATE OF DEATH=
|PLACE OF DEATH=
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Calatrava, Santiago}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Calatrava, Santiago}}
[[Category:IStructE Gold Medal Winners]]
[[Category:1951 births]]
[[Category:Spanish architects]]
[[Category:20th-century Spanish architects]]
[[Category:Spanish engineers]]
[[Category:20th-century Spanish engineers]]
[[Category:21st-century Spanish architects]]
[[Category:21st-century Spanish engineers]]
[[Category:Architects from the Valencian Community]]
[[Category:Artists from Valencia]]
[[Category:Columbia School of Engineering and Applied Science alumni]]
[[Category:Engineers from the Valencian Community]]
[[Category:ETH Zurich alumni]]
[[Category:ETH Zurich alumni]]
[[Category:Futurist architects]]
[[Category:Grand Officers of the Order of Merit (Portugal)]]
[[Category:IStructE Gold Medal winners]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Members of the Académie d'architecture]]
[[Category:Members of the Pontifical Council for Culture]]
[[Category:Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts]]
[[Category:Officiers of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres]]
[[Category:Organic architecture]]
[[Category:Recipients of the AIA Gold Medal]]
[[Category:Skyscraper architects]]
[[Category:Spanish bridge engineers]]
[[Category:Structural engineers]]
[[Category:Structural engineers]]
[[Category:Bridge engineers]]
[[Category:Technical University of Valencia alumni]]
[[Category:Valencian people]]
[[Category:1951 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]

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Latest revision as of 18:24, 18 December 2024

Santiago Calatrava Valls
Calatrava in 2010
Born (1951-07-28) 28 July 1951 (age 73)
Valencia, Spain
NationalitySpanish-Swiss
EducationPolytechnic University of Valencia
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
DisciplineStructural engineer, Architect, sculptor
InstitutionsInstitution of Structural Engineers
Practice nameSantiago Calatrava
ProjectsTurning Torso
Athens Olympic Sports Complex
Auditorio de Tenerife
Alamillo bridge
Chords Bridge
Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències
Liège-Guillemins railway station
Museum of Tomorrow
World Trade Center station (PATH)
Dubai Creek Tower
St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church (Manhattan)
AwardsEuropean Prize for Architecture
AIA Gold Medal
IStructE Gold Medal
Eugene McDermott Award
Prince of Asturias Award
Auguste Perret Prize

Santiago Calatrava Valls (born 28 July 1951) is a Spanish architect, structural engineer, sculptor and painter, particularly known for his bridges supported by single leaning pylons, and his railway stations, stadiums, and museums, whose sculptural forms often resemble living organisms.[1] His best-known works include the Olympic Sports Complex of Athens, the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Turning Torso tower in Malmö, Sweden, the World Trade Center Transportation Hub in New York City, the Auditorio de Tenerife in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge in Dallas, Texas, and his largest project, the City of Arts and Sciences and Opera House in his birthplace, Valencia. His architectural firm has offices in New York City, Doha, and Zurich.

Early life

[edit]

Calatrava was born on 28 July 1951, in Benimàmet, an old municipality now part of Valencia, Spain. His Calatrava surname was an old aristocratic one from medieval times, and was once associated with an order of knights in Spain.[2] He had his primary and secondary schooling in Valencia, and, beginning in 1957, studied drawing and painting at the School of Applied Art. In 1964, as the regime of General Francisco Franco relaxed and Spain became more open to the rest of Europe, he went to France as an exchange student. In 1968, after completing secondary school, he went to study at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, but he arrived in the midst of student uprisings and turmoil in Paris, and returned home. Back in Valencia, he discovered a book about the architecture of Le Corbusier, which persuaded him that he could be both an artist and an architect. He enrolled in the Higher School of Architecture at the Polytechnic University of Valencia. He received his diploma as an architect and then did higher studies in urbanism. [3] At the university he completed independent projects with fellow students, publishing two books on the vernacular architecture of Valencia and Ibiza.[4]

In 1975, he enrolled in the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland for a second degree in civil engineering. In 1981, he was awarded a doctorate in the department of architecture, after completing his thesis on "The Pliability of three-dimensional structures." [5] Speaking of this period, Calatrava told biographer Philip Jodidio:"The desire to start all over at zero was very strong in me. I was fascinated by the concept of gravity and convinced that it was necessary to begin work with simple forms." [3] Calatrava explained that he was particularly influenced by the work of the early 20th century Swiss engineer Robert Maillart (1872–1940), which taught him that, "with an adequate combination of force and mass, you can create emotion."[3]

First projects and international attention

[edit]

As soon as Calatrava completed his doctorate in 1981, he opened his own office in Zurich. He designed an exposition hall, a factory, a library, and two bridges, but none were built, Finally in 1983, he began to receive commissions for industrial and transportation structures of increasingly greater size; he designed and built the Entrepôt Jakem, a warehouse in Münchwilen, Thurgau, Switzerland, another warehouse in Coesfeld-Lette, Germany, an addition to the main post office in Lucerne, Switzerland; a bus shelter in Saint-Gall, Switzerland (1983–85) the roof of a school in Wohlen, Switzerland (1983–88), and then some major projects; a new hall for the railway station in Lucerne (1983–89) and then an entire train station, the Zürich Stadelhofen railway station in Switzerland (1983–1990). The train station has several of the features that became signatures of his work; straight lines and right angles are rare. The railroad platforms curve, the supporting columns lean, the concrete walls of the modernistic cavern beneath the tracks are everywhere pierced with teardrop shaped skylights, and tilting glass panels provide light and shelter without enclosing the platforms.[5]

In 1984–87, he built his first bridge, the Bac de Roda Bridge in Barcelona, Spain, which for the first time brought him international notice. The bridge, designed for cyclists and pedestrians, connects two parts of the city by crossing a wasteland of railway tracks. It is 128 metres (420 ft) long, with twin arches which lean at an angle of thirty degrees; a feature which quickly became the stylistic signature of Calatrava. The upper portion of the bridge, composed of steel arches and cables, is light and airy, like a network of lace, anchored to the massive concrete supports and granite pillars below.[5]

His next bridge, the Puente del Alamillo (1987–1992), in Seville, Spain, was even more spectacular and cemented his reputation. Built as part of the 1992 Expo 92, it is 200 metres (660 ft) long, crossing the Meandro San Jeronimo River. Its main feature is a single pylon 142 metres (466 ft) high, leaning to 58 degrees, the same angle as the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt. The weight of the concrete of the pylon is sufficient to hold up the bridge with just thirteen pairs of cables, eliminating the need for any cables behind it.[6]

Projects of the 1990s

[edit]

At the beginning of the 1990s, Calatrava built several remarkable railway stations and bridges, but broadened his portfolio by designing a wider range of structures, including a Canadian shopping center, a new passenger terminal for Bilbao airport, and his first building in the United States, the new structure of the Milwaukee Art Museum. In 1992, he completed one of his most picturesque and sculptural works, the Montjuïc Communications Tower in Barcelona (1989–92), a 136 m (446 ft)-high graceful concrete spire designed for the site of the 1992 Olympics. The concrete pylon leans backwards, and seems to grasp the vertical broadcast antennas. Its form suggests an athlete about to throw a javelin. The circular building at the base of the tower, which contains the broadcast equipment, is clad in white bricks and is equipped with metal resembling an eye which opens and closes. The building has a particularly Catalan touch, borrowed from the park benches of Park Güell of Antonio Gaudi: a decoration of colorful ceramics tiles. The square next to it is laid out like a giant sundial, on which the tower casts its shadow. In 1992, he also finished his first North American project, the Allen Lambert Galleria in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The interior of the shopping mall is covered by a glass roof supported by columns like gigantic trees, a modern version of the Belle Epoque Les Halles market in Paris.[7]

Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry (1989–1994) and the Eastern Train Station in Lisbon (1992–98)

[edit]

Two years later, in 1994, he completed another notable train station, the Gare de Lyon Saint-Exupéry (1989–1994) at the Lyon airport in Satolas. This building was designed to be both a functional link between the airport and train station, the terminal for the high-speed TGV trains, and a symbol of the Rhone-Alps Region. The station is covered by a giant shell of steel and glass, 120 by 100 metres (390 by 330 ft), suspended at a maximum height of 40 metres (130 ft), and weighing 1,300 tonnes (1,300 long tons; 1,400 short tons). It is connected with the airport terminal by a 180 metres (590 ft) long glass and concrete bridge. The glass and steel sides and skylights of the terminal from the inside resemble a modernistic cathedral; the glass panels at the top are intended to suggest flight. From the outside, the station has been said to resemble a prehistoric animal, while the glass-and-steel bridge has been compared to a bird or a manta ray.[7]

The Gare do Oriente, or eastern train station, was constructed for the 1998 Lisbon World Exposition, and is located in a former industrial area. It was designed to bridge the wasteland which separated the residential area of the city from the Tagus River. Similar to the galleria he designed in Toronto, but on a grander scale, the interior of the station features a forest of white columns like gigantic trees that support the glass roof, 238 by 78 metres (781 by 256 ft), which covers the eight tracks. The station complex also includes a shopping center, and transport links by tram and metro to the center of the city. With its multiple arches and curves, the structure appears to be moving and ready to take off.[8]

Bilbao Airport (1990–2000)

[edit]

One of his last projects in the 20th century was the Bilbao Airport in Spain, notable both for its unusual control tower, 42 metres (138 ft) high – made of concrete clad with aluminum, which widens as it grows taller, and which resembles a statue holding its hands in front of it – and for terminal buildings, where the white concrete structures are united with aluminum forms. The terminal buildings themselves lift upwards and seem to be trying to take off, giving them the airport the popular nickname of "The Dove".

Museums, concert halls and skyscrapers (2000–2010)

[edit]

Following 2000, Calatrava completed a new addition to the Milwaukee Art Museum, a concert hall in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, a twisting skyscraper in Malmö, Sweden, and a City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia, Spain. in Sweden, and a wooden castle-like winery in Spain, all in astonishing forms and all seemingly in motion.

Milwaukee Art Museum (1994–2001)

[edit]

The Quadracci Pavilion of the Milwaukee Art Museum (1994–2001) was Calatrava's first building in the United States, and his first museum. It displayed the technical innovations and forms he had first used in his railway stations and airports, but with more freedom of form and architectural theatrics. It is an addition to an existing building, constructed by Eero Saarinen in 1957 next to Lake Michigan, with a later addition in 1975 by David Kahler. The purpose of the new pavilion, as defined by the museum board, was to give the museum a new entrance, and especially "to redefine the identity of the museum with a strong image." Calatrava's design was selected after a competition entered by seventy-seven architects. Calatrava's solution was a glass and steel entry hall 2 metres (6.6 ft) high with a moveable sun screen roof, composed of two large wings made up of twenty-six smaller wings, from 8 to 32 metres (26 to 105 ft) in length. The sunscreen, weighing 115 tonnes (113 long tons; 127 short tons), can be hoisted up by a single pylon, like an enormous bird's wing, or lowered when the wind from the lake is stronger than 65 kilometres per hour (35 kn). The interior of the structure has a conference hall, exposition space, shops, and a restaurant overlooking the lake. He also designed a suspension footbridge between the center of the city and edge of the lake.[9]

Bodegas Ysios winery (1998–2001)

[edit]

The Bodegas Ysios winery in Laguardia, Spain (1998–2001) was designed as a symbol of the Rioja wines made by that winery. Built on a sloping site surrounded by vineyards, the 196-metre (643 ft) long building has an aluminum roof and a facade covered with laminated wood panels, alternating between convex and concave, with a roofline that ripples like a series of waves.[10]

Auditorio de Tenerife (1991–2003)

[edit]

The Auditorio de Tenerife, Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, is a concert hall with 1558 seats and a smaller chamber music hall of 428 seats. With a curving concrete cupola 60 metres (200 ft) high, crowned by a curving roof like a breaking wave, it dominates the city square and old town below. The shell is covered with ceramic tiles and the pavement and most of the floors are made of the local basalt stone. The unusual sculptural form of the building gives it a completely different appearance depending upon from where it is viewed. [10]

Turning Torso (1999–2004)

[edit]

The Turning Torso in Malmö, Sweden, was Calatrava's first skyscraper, and was the first twisting skyscraper, a form which later appeared in other cities around the world from Shanghai to Moscow. The building was originally conceived by the architect as a sculpture of "seven cubes stacked on a steel support creating a spiral structure resembling a twisting spinal column." [11] The tower is 190 metres (620 ft) high, and twists a full ninety degrees from the base to the top. Each of the nine cubes cube is like a separate five-story building; each floor contains from one to five apartments. The support holding the structure together is the column of elevators and escalators which communicate between the cubes. A system of discreet cross beams on the exterior frame manage the torsion of the twisting building. In 2016, it was the tallest building in Scandinavia.[12]

Athens Olympic Sports Complex (2001–2004)

[edit]

For the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, Calatrava won the commission to cover the existing stadium with a new roof, to make a similar roof for the velodrome, and additionally to build four entrance gateways, a monumental sculpture to symbolize the games, and other architectural features to give harmony and variety to the complex. The roof for the stadium, in the form of bent "leaves" of laminated glass, is designed to reflect 90 percent of the sunlight. The roof covers 25,000 square metres (270,000 sq ft), and is supported by double-tied arches of tubular steel, with a span of 304 metres (997 ft) and a height of 60 metres (200 ft). It is 250 metres (820 ft) long and 20 metres (66 ft) high, suspended by cables from two parabolic arches. The Velodrome has a white cap supported by two concrete arches 45 metres (148 ft) high, weighing 4,000 tonnes (3,900 long tons; 4,400 short tons), from which the glass and steel roof is suspended. Calatrava also designed an enormous parabolic arch at the entrance and the Wall of Nations, a mobile sculpture of tubular steel which moves in a wavelike patterns.[13]

City of Arts and Sciences and Opera House in Valencia (1991–2006)

[edit]

The largest group of buildings by Calatrava is found in his birthplace, Valencia, Spain, and was built in over a decade. It includes the City of Arts and Sciences (1991–2000) and the Opera house (1996–2006), all constructed on a plot of 35 hectares between a highway and a river on the east side of the city. The L'Hemisfèric, like a half-sunken globe, is placed in the centre, next to a large artificial lake, in which it seems to be sinking. The dome is covered by a metal screen which opens and closes, and the entrance opens like a human eye. On one side is the science museum, behind a line of leaning columns, and on the other is the newest structure, the massive shell of the opera house, described by Calatrava as a "monumental sculpture", which gives the impression of being continually in motion.[14]

Liège-Guillemins railway station (2009)

[edit]

The Liège-Guillemins railway station for high-speed trains in Liège, Belgium is covered with a lace-like roof of glass and steel 160 metres (520 ft) long and 32 metres (105 ft) high, covering the nine tracks and five platforms. The transparent roof seems to eliminate the distinction between indoors and outdoors.[1]

Recent major projects (2011–)

[edit]

Oviedo Conference Center (2000–2011)

[edit]

The conference center and exposition hall in the Spanish city of Oviedo combines two office buildings and a hotel, covered with horizontal bands of glass and steel and perched upon curving concrete pylons, with elliptical conference center, which includes a main theater, exposition hall and seminar rooms. The Center include another signature feature of Calatrava's work; a sunscreen that was supposed to be able to fold and unfold, but was never functional. The ceiling of the concert hall is an ascending series of arcs, which echo the curving rows of seats.[15]

Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge (2007–2012) and Peace Bridge (2008–2012)

[edit]

Calatrava constructed a series of extraordinary bridges, the type of structure which originally brought him global attention, for cities around the world that wanted a symbol of modernity and daring. Among the largest and dramatic are three bridges over the Trinity River in Dallas, Texas. The first of these was the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge, opened for traffic in March 2012. The bridge, carrying six lanes of traffic, is 209 metres (686 ft) long, with the appearance of being[16] suspended from an arc-shaped tubular steel pylon forty stories or 136 metres (446 ft) high by fifty-eight cables, ranging in length from 119 to 196 metres (390 to 643 ft). In form, the bridge resembles one of three bridges constructed in 2005–2005 on the Autostrada A1 in Reggio Emilia, Italy.[17][18] Work on the second bridge, the Margaret McDermott Bridge, began in 2011.[19]

The Peace Bridge in Calgary, Canada, built between 2008 and 2012, is a completely different bridge in purpose, scale and design. Built across the Bow River, and designed for pedestrians and cyclists, it is a glass and stew-wrapped tube 126 metres (413 ft) long. It appears extraordinary long for a bridge with no towers or pylons to hold it up. Calatrava described the form in his own particular engineering vocabulary as "defined by a helicoidal movement, with an ovoid cross section, with two clearly materialized tangential lanes expressing an internal architectural volume." [20]

Florida Polytechnic University (2009–2014)

[edit]

The project for the new Florida Polytechnic University in Lakeland, Florida (2009–2014) gave Calatrava the opportunity to design an entire campus in a unified style. The site covers 170 acres (69 ha) of land which once contained phosphorus mines, many of which have been filled with water creating small lakes.Calatrava's plan combined several small lakes into a central lake, which serves as a setting for the central structure, the Innovation, Science, and Technology (IST) building. The eye-shaped central building has an area of 200,000 square feet on two floors, and contains all the classrooms, faculty offices laboratories and public spaces until the other buildings are completed. The building has several signature Calatrava features, including an extendable sun scene on the roof, which entirely changes the appearance of the building when deployed, and whose form changes gradually as the sun moves. The terraces of the building are covered by a curving pergola, or screen, of steel, which reduces the direct sunlight by thirty percent. Inside, the corridors and central courtyard are lit by the central skylight. Plans for the building call for the installation of 1,860 square metres (20,000 sq ft) of solar panels on the sunscreen to provide energy for the building. The library of the university is also distinctive; it does not have a single book; all the collection is digitized.[21]

The structure has been called by some journalists a response to the criticism of the high price and technical flaws of some of Calatrava's earlier buildings. The review in Architecture magazine, the journal of the American Institute of Architects, reported: "The building is full of handsome and even some very impressive spaces, but none of the singularly breathtaking ones that have made Calatrava, despite his price tag, so attractive to clients looking for marketing splash to go with their museum wing or train station. It reflects serious attention to detail and the bottom line; this is the work of an architect actively trying to prove, or at least re-emphasize, his bona fides."[22]

Museum of Tomorrow, Rio de Janeiro (2010–2015)

[edit]

The Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which opened in December 2015, is part of the redevelopment of the waterfront of Rio de Janeiro, and opened in time for the 2016 Summer Olympics in that city. The building is sited on a 7,600 square metres (82,000 sq ft) plaza next to the harbor, and surrounded by reflecting pools. The building is cantilevered 75 metres (246 ft) over the plaza, and 45 metres (148 ft) toward the sea. and gives the impression that it is floating on the water. Calatrava wrote, "The idea is that the building feels ethereal, almost floating on the sea, like a ship, a bird or a plant." The roof is equipped with moveable screens that adjust to the movements of the sun. The interior design is what Calatrava calls "archetypal" and simplified, to allow for exhibits in a greater variety of forms and sizes.

The museum also includes a number of ecological features; water from the sea is used to regulate the temperature inside the building, and to refill the surrounding reflecting pools.[23][24] The Guardian described it as "an other-worldly edifice that looks like a cross between a solar-powered dinosaur and a giant air conditioning unit", and declared "it must already rank as one of the world's most extraordinary buildings."[25]

WTC Hub, New York City (2003–2016)

[edit]

Calatrava designed the WTC Transportation Hub in New York City at the rebuilt World Trade Center at the site of the September 11 attacks in 2001. The new station connects the regional trains of the new PATH with the subway and other local transportation, and also has a large retail mall, replacing commercial space destroyed in the attack. The above-ground "oculus" of the station, made of glass and steel, is oval-shaped, and is 35 metres (115 ft) long and 29 metres (95 ft) high. According to Calatrava, it resembles "a bird flying from the hands of a child".[26] The "Wings" of the above-ground structure were originally designed to move upward to a maximum height of 51 metres (167 ft) to form a double screen 51 metres (167 ft) high, but this feature had to be dropped to meet new security standards. The main hall of the station is 10 metres (33 ft) underground, and the tracks of the PATH system on another level 8 metres (26 ft) below. The underground station was originally designed so that its roof would open entirely in good weather, but this feature also had to be dropped due to its cost and space limitations.[26]

The WTC Hub has been controversial because of its cost (4 billion dollars, twice the original estimate, and the most expensive railway station ever built) and its delays (seven years on 3 March 2016, seven years behind schedule). More than $1 billion of its cost went to administrative expenses and the decision to build around the 1 train of the New York City Subway.[27][28] Michael Kimmelman, the architecture critic of the New York Times, praised the soaring upward view inside the Oculus, but condemned the building's cost, "scale, monotony of materials and color, preening formalism and disregard for the gritty urban fabric."[29]

Controversy and criticism

[edit]

After years of praise and commendation, in 2013 some of Calatrava's projects began to draw criticism on the grounds of their cost, delays, and functional problems. Many of these criticisms were packaged together in an article by Suzanne Daley in the New York Times on 13 September 2013, entitled "Santiago Calatrava collects critics as well as fans."[28]

Daley wrote: "...in numerous interviews, other architects, academics and builders say that Mr. Calatrava is amassing an unusually long list of projects marred by cost overruns, delays and litigation. It is hard to find a Calatrava project that has not been significantly over budget. And complaints abound that he is indifferent to the needs of his clients. In 2013 a Dutch councillor in Haarlemmermeer, near Amsterdam, urged his colleagues to take legal action because the three bridges the architect designed for the town cost twice the budgeted amount and then millions more in upkeep since they opened in 2004."[28]

Much of the criticism focused on the City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia, originally budgeted for about $405 million. Ignacio Blanco, the leader of a small opposition party in Valencia, blamed Calatrava of spending nearly three times the original budget, and accused the region of paying him approximately $127 million for his work, though the complex was originally lacking elevators for the disabled, and the opera house had 150 seats with obstructed views. In 2013 Calatrava sued his critic for defamation and won, however because the judge ruled that, although the website presented "objective truths", its name "Calatrava te la clava" (a rhyme meaning "Calatrava bleeds you dry") was "insulting and degrading".[30]

An inclined wall covered with white pieces of ceramic under a blue sky. Some of the tiles are missing, others are detached from the wall and raise against other pieces.
Missing and ill-fitting tiles on the wall of the Auditorio de Tenerife in 2015.

Some of the problems with Calatrava's projects have been caused by unusual design choices and insufficient testing. The glass tiles on the floor of his bridge in Bilbao became slippery in the rain, causing an increased number of claims for injuries and forcing the installation of a black anti-slip carpet on the decking, which blocked the view of the river through the walkway. The metal arches he put over some landscaped gardens sometimes overheated in the sunshine, baking the vines that were supposed to grow on them.[31] The Caja Madrid Obelisk is a kinetic sculpture with an undulating movement. However the maintenance costs are so high that it has been static since months after its inauguration in 2010.[32] The aluminum and wood covering of a winery in Spain leaked water, interfering with the winemaking and requiring extensive repairs. The ceramic tiles on the surface of the opera house in Valencia, placed as a tribute to Antonio Gaudi, buckled in the heat because concrete and ceramics expand and contract at different rates when temperatures change. Calatrava was sued for the cost of repairs on the bridge in Venice and has been condemned in court.[33] Also the trencadís tiles of the Tenerife Auditorium buckle and lose adhesion. The fixing is delayed by disputes between the Calatrava studio and the building companies.[34]

WTC Hub

[edit]

Much of the criticism focused on Calatrava's WTC Hub, which was completed in 2016 for a cost of $4 billion, twice what was expected and seven years behind schedule. Calatrava was paid a fee of 80 million dollars.[35] Some of the additional cost and delay was due to additions and modifications to the original plan by the project owners, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, rather than the architect. Calatrava's original entry pavilion was scaled back for security reasons[36] and the mechanism for opening the roof to the gallery below was eliminated because of budget and space restraints.[37]

Even before it opened the station was a target of criticism: the New York Post described the station in 2014 as it was being built as "a self-indulgent monstrosity" and "a hideous waste of public money". Michael Kimmelman, architecture critic for The New York Times, referred to the structure as "a kitsch stegosaurus".[38][non-primary source needed] New York magazine referred to it in 2015 as it neared completion as a "Glorious Boondoggle".[39] The New York Post editorial board also described the station when it opened in 2016 as the "world's most obscenely overpriced commuter rail station – and possibly its ugliest", comparing the Oculus to a "giant gray-white space insect".[40]

The Hub also had its defenders. Jimmy Stamp of The Guardian wrote: "I despised the new World Trade Center transportation hub before I even saw it. It's $2bn over budget, has suffered from construction problems and design compromises, it's seven years late and still incomplete, and its architect, Santiago Calatrava, has left a trail of lawsuits and angry clients around the world....But when I was standing on the marble floors in its enormous, gleaming central concourse two stories below street level, staring up at a clear blue sky between bone-white ribs vaulting 160ft over my head, I, like Jonah in the whale, repented – at least for the moment....We deserve grand expressions of our artistic and technological capabilities. We deserve public spaces that inspire. The Oculus is deeply flawed, but I appreciate its aspiration and grandeur.... The Oculus presents a more optimistic vision, one based less on present realities and more on future possibilities. Less Blade Runner, more Star Trek. By the time we get to that future, whichever one it may be, the delays and the cost and the controversies will be forgotten, but we will be left with a luminous great hall in the heart of downtown New York."[41]

Athens Olympic Sports Complex

[edit]

In October 2023 the Greek government decided to shut down the Athens Olympic Stadium and Velodrome, which both have a roof built by Calatrava, due to stability issues posing a threat for attendees and workers.[42]

Style and influences

[edit]

Calatrava has never described himself as a follower of any particular school or movement of architecture. Critics have claimed that a number of influences can be seen in his work. In the journal of the American Institute of Architects, Christopher Hawthorne wrote about his design for Florida Polytechnic University, which he called "an example of Calatrava's architectural approach and creative sensibility distilled, for better and worse, to its essence. There are all the usual influences on view—the Eero Saarinen forms rendered in the Richard Meier, FAIA, palette—and they are remarkably legible and easy to parse here."[43] Some other critics see his work as a continuation of expressionism.[44][45] Asked about critics who classified him into different schools, Calatrava responded, "Architectural critics have not yet passed from a state of perplexity about my work."[46]

Calatrava himself observed that he was particularly influenced by the work of engineers such as the Swiss Robert Maillart (1872–1940), whose work inspired him to seek simple forms which could create an emotional response.[3] Calatrava defined his objective this way in 2016 in a book about his work: "My major interest is the introduction of a new formal vocabulary, composed of forms adapted to our time."[47]

Calatrava, a sculptor, has also spoken frequently about the connection between sculpture and architecture in his work. "In sculpture, I have often used spheres, cubes and other simple forms often connected with my knowledge of engineering." He noted that his Turning Torso building had originally been conceived as a work of sculpture, and he praised the liberties taken by Frank Gehry and Frank Stella in creating sculptural art, but he also noted the differences. In 1997 he wrote that "architecture and sculpture are two rivers in which the same water flows. Think of sculpture as a pure plastic art while architecture is a plastic art which is submitted to function, taking into consideration the human scale."[48] Calatrava also noted the influence of the sculptor Auguste Rodin, citing Rodin's words in his 1914 book Cathedrals of France: "The sculptor only achieves the greatness of expression in concentrating his attention on harmonic contrasts of light and shadow, exactly as an architect does."[49]

Movement is also an important element in the architecture of Calatrava. He noted that many 20th century sculptors, such as Alexander Calder, made sculptures that moved. He wrote his own university thesis on "The Flexibility of three-dimensional structures," and described how objects, by moving, could shift from three dimensions to two and even to one. Moving elements which folded and expanded became an important element of almost all of his projects. "Architecture itself moves", he told a biographer, "and, with a little chance, becomes a magnificent ruin".[50]

Artworks

[edit]

Calatrava is also a sculptor and painter. Some of his architectural works, most notably the Turning Torso in Malmö, Sweden, were originally works of sculpture.[51] In 2006, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City held a special one-man exhibition of Calatrava's drawings, sculpture, and architectural models, entitled Santiago Calatrava: Sculpture Into Architecture.[52][53]

In 2012, the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg held an exhibition of his work[54] and this was followed up by an exhibition at the Vatican Museum in Rome.[55] Eight of his sculptures were displayed along Park Avenue in New York City in the spring of 2015, between 52nd and 55th Streets.[56]

In 2024, the first comprehensive overview of Calatrava’s art was written by Nick Mafi and published by Hirmer.[57]

Notable works

[edit]
Milwaukee Art Museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. (2001)
Montjuïc Communications Tower, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain (1992)
Turning Torso in Malmö, Sweden (2005)
Chords Bridge for pedestrians and train in Jerusalem (2008)
Auditorio de Tenerife, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain (2003)
World Trade Center Transportation Hub, New York City (2016)
Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2015)

Completed

[edit]

Under construction/proposed

[edit]
In Europe
In the Middle East
  • Sharq Crossing, Doha, Qatar: project for three bridges and two tunnels (postponed until after 2022)
  • Dubai Creek Tower, Dubai, UAE (ground broken, scheduled for completion in 2025; in competition for world's tallest structure)[60]
In East Asia

Abandoned

[edit]

Recognition

[edit]

Calatrava has received numerous awards for his design and engineering work.[61] In 1988, he was awarded with the Fazlur Khan International Fellowship by the SOM Foundation.[62] In 1990, he received the "Médaille d'Argent de la Recherche et de la Technique", in Paris. In 1992 he received the prestigious Gold Medal of the Institution of Structural Engineers. In 1993, the Museum of Modern Art in New York held a major exhibition of his work called "Structure and Expression". In 1998 he was elected to become a member of "Les Arts et Lettres", in Paris. In 2005 he received the Gold Medal from the American Institute of Architects (AIA).

In 2005, Calatrava was awarded the Eugene McDermott Award by the Council for the Arts of MIT.[63]

He is also a Senior Fellow of the Design Futures Council.[64]

Calatrava has received a total of twenty-two honorary degrees in recognition of his work. In 2013, Calatrava was awarded an honorary doctorate from Georgia Institute of Technology, an award that has only been given to a small number of people.[65][66]

Honorary degrees

[edit]
  • 1993 Honorary Degree from Universidad Politecnica de Valencia
  • 1994 Honorary Degree from Heriot-Watt University
  • 1994 Honorary Degree from University of Seville
  • 1995 Honorary Degree from University of Salford
  • 1996 Honorary Degree from University of Strathclyde
  • 1997 Honorary Degree from Milwaukee School of Engineering
  • 1997 Honoris Causa Degree awarded by Delft University of Technology
  • 1999 Honoris Causa Degree from University of Cassino
  • 1999 Honorary Degree from Lund University
  • 1999 Honorary Degree from Universita degli Studi di Ferrara
  • 2004 Honorary Degree from Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
  • 2005 Honorary Degree from Southern Methodist University
  • 2006 Honorary Engineering Degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
  • 2005 Honorary Degree from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
  • 2007 Honorary Engineering Degree from Columbia University
  • 2008 Honorary Degree from Tel Aviv University
  • 2009 Honorary Degree from Oxford University
  • 2009 Honorary Degree from University Camilo Jose Cela
  • 2010 Honorary Degree from Universite de Liège
  • 2012 Honorary Degree from Pratt Institute
  • 2013 Honorary Doctoral Degree from Georgia Institute of Technology[67]
  • 2016 Honorary Doctoral Degree from Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN) in México[68]

Other honours

[edit]

Personal life

[edit]

Calatrava resides in Zurich and New York City. Two of Calatrava's sons have completed advanced degrees in engineering from the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science at Columbia University in New York City.[72] His other son obtained a law degree from Columbia University and practices at the law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP in Chicago, Illinois. [73] Calatrava has one daughter who completed advanced degrees in computer science and data analytics at Columbia University in New York City.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Taschen & Taschen 2016, p. 108.
  2. ^ "Santiago Calatrava Biography – life, family, children, name, story, wife, school, mother, young – Newsmakers Cumulation". notablebiographies.com. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d Jodidio 2016, p. 7.
  4. ^ "Biography: Santiago Calatrava". Southern Methodist University News. 7 October 2002. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Jodidio 2016, p. 91.
  6. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 3.
  7. ^ a b Jodidio 2016, p. 33.
  8. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 53.
  9. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 57.
  10. ^ a b Jodidio 2016, pp. 63–65.
  11. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 67.
  12. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 67-69.
  13. ^ "Athens Olympics Sports Complex". Arcspace.com. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  14. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 47-51.
  15. ^ Jodidio 2016, pp. 70–71.
  16. ^ Schutze, Jim. "No, Really. Not Joking. Huge Arches on McDermott Bridge Are Fake. Go Figure". Dallas Observer.
  17. ^ Rogers, Tim (22 June 2011). "Is Our Calatrava Bridge a Copy of Reggio Emilia's?". FrontBurner. Dallas, Texas: D Magazine Partners, Inc. Archived from the original on 2 January 2017. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  18. ^ Rago, Danielle (7 March 2012). "Building As Icon: Santiago Calatrava's first completed bridge in the United States evokes Eero Saarinen's Gateway Arch in shape and motivation". Domus. Dallas, Texas. Archived from the original on 7 April 2013. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  19. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 93.
  20. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 81.
  21. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 83.
  22. ^ Hawthorne, Christopher (13 October 2014). "Florida Polytechnic University, Designed by Santiago Calatrava". Architect. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  23. ^ Rosenfield, Karissa (17 December 2015). "Santiago Calatrava's Museum of Tomorrow Opens in Rio de Janeiro". ArchDaily. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  24. ^ Murdock, James (10 October 2010). "Calatrava's "Museum of Tomorrow" to Showcase a Greener Future for Rio". Architectural Record. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  25. ^ Watts, Jonathan (17 December 2015). "Museum of Tomorrow: a captivating invitation to imagine a sustainable world". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  26. ^ a b Jodidio 2016, p. 77.
  27. ^ "Why The World Trade Center Transportation Hub Is Going To Cost $4 Billion". Business Insider. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  28. ^ a b c Daley, Suzanne (13 September 2013). "A Star Architect Leaves Some Clients Fuming". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  29. ^ Kimmelman, Michael (2 March 2016). "Santiago Calatrava's Transit Hub Is a Soaring Symbol of a Boondoggle". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  30. ^ "Santiago Calatrava wins legal battle against 'insulting and degrading' website". De Zeen Magazine. 21 May 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  31. ^ Daley, Suzanne (25 September 2013). "Santiago Calatrava Collects Critics as Well as Fans". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  32. ^ "El obelisco de Calatrava seguirá siendo estático por la política de "contención del gasto"". www.europapress.es. Europa Press. 22 September 2014. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
  33. ^ LaInformacion (14 August 2019). "Multan al arquitecto español Calatrava por el fiasco de su puente en Venecia". La Información (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  34. ^ Morales, Álvaro (18 June 2024). "El Auditorio de Tenerife, que costó 74 millones, en avanzado deterioro y hasta con cinta americana en su fachada". ElDiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 June 2024.
  35. ^ Walker, Alissa (20 April 2016). "Can You Guess How Much NYC Paid The Architect of the Most Expensive Train Station On Earth?". Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  36. ^ Dunlap, David W. (28 July 2005). "Approval Expected Today for Trade Center Rail Hub". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 July 2008.
  37. ^ Dunlap, David W. (2 July 2008). "Design of Ground Zero Transit Hub Is Trimmed". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 July 2008.
  38. ^ Kimmelman, Michael (2 December 2014). "Michael Kimmelman on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  39. ^ Rice, Andrew (12 March 2015). "The Glorious Boondoggle". New York. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  40. ^ New York Post Editorial Board (23 February 2016). "$4 Billion Buys the World's Ugliest Commuter Rail Stop". New York Post. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  41. ^ "New York's Oculus transit hub soars, but it's a phoenix with a price tag". TheGuardian.com. 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  42. ^ "Closing of Iconic Athens Olympic Stadium Raises Concerns Over Structural Stability". greekcitytimes.com. 3 October 2023.
  43. ^ Christopher Hawthorne, Architect- the Journal of the Institute of American Institute of Architects, 13 October 2014
  44. ^ "Calatrava, Santiago". infoplease.com. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  45. ^ "Architectural Record – News, Continuing Ed, Products, Green Bldg". Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  46. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 8.
  47. ^ Taschen & Taschen 2016, p. 111.
  48. ^ cited in Gonzales, Julio, Dessiner dans l'espace, Skira, Kutsmuseum, Berne (1997)
  49. ^ Rodin, Auguste, Les Cathedrals de France, Armand Colin, Paris, 1914
  50. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 11.
  51. ^ Jodidio 2016, p. 19.
  52. ^ The Metropolitan Museum of Art – Special Exhibitions: Santiago Calatrava: Sculpture Into Architecture Archived 29 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ Images from the March 2006 Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition. Archived 10 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  54. ^ "'Santiago Calatrava: The Quest for Movement' Exhibition". Arch Daily. 2 July 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  55. ^ "Santiago Calatrava: The Metamorphosis of Space". Arch Daily. 5 December 2013. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  56. ^ Chaban, Matt (21 March 2014). "The canvas and creativity drive renowned architect Santiago Calatrava's structures". Daily News. New York. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  57. ^ Mafi, Nick (October 2024). Calatrava: Art. Hirmer Verlag GmbH. ISBN 978-3777442143.
  58. ^ "Sculpture by Santiago Calatrava to be unveiled at SMU's Meadows Museum". Southern Methodist University News. 7 October 2002. Archived from the original on 24 May 2013. Retrieved 13 November 2013.
  59. ^ Nayeri, Farah (2 February 2017). "Santiago Calatrava to Design His First London Complex". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  60. ^ Kim, Soo (12 October 2016). "New Dubai skyscraper to surpass the world's tallest building". The Telegraph. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  61. ^ "Santiago Calatrava Awards". Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  62. ^ "SOM Foundation Fellows Archive". Archived from the original on 16 July 2011.
  63. ^ Established to honor Eugene McDermott, founder of Texas Instruments and long-time friend and benefactor to MIT, the award was created by the Council for the Arts at MIT in 1974, and further endowed by Eugene's wife, Margaret. Since its inception, the Council has bestowed the award upon 31 individuals producing creative work in the performing, visual and media arts, as well as authors, art historians and patrons of the arts.
  64. ^ "Senior Fellows – Design Futures Council". Design Intelligence. Archived from the original on 6 November 2007. Retrieved 13 November 2013.
  65. ^ Treadaway, Dan (Fall 2013). "Santiago Calatrava: Blurring Boundaries". Georgia Tech. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  66. ^ Herman, Lisa. "Architect John Portman honored with Council for Quality Growth's Four Pillars Award", Georgia Tech, 10 November 2013. Retrieved 29 May 2014. "...Doctorate of Philosophy by Georgia Tech, an accolade only a handful of individuals have achieved..."
  67. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "YouTube – Dr. Santiago Calatrava Receives Honorary Degree and Remarks". 16 December 2013. Retrieved 29 April 2014 – via YouTube.
  68. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: AGENCIA EFE (10 October 2016). "Santiago Calatrava recibe Honoris Causa del Instituto Politécnico Nacional de México". Retrieved 17 March 2017 – via YouTube.
  69. ^ NOMINA DI MEMBRI DEL PONTIFICIO CONSIGLIO DELLA CULTURA Archived 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  70. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  71. ^ "2004 Summit Highlights Photo: Famed Spanish architect and structural engineer, Santiago Calatrava, receives the Golden Plate Award presented by Awards Council member Quincy Jones during the 43rd annual International Achievement Summit in Chicago". Academy of Achievement.
  72. ^ Davidson, Justin (28 April 2013). "Santiago Calatrava's Three Sons". New York. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  73. ^ "Rafael A. Calatrava | Professionals | Kirkland & Ellis LLP". Retrieved 2 December 2024.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Jodidio, Philip (2016). Calatrava (in French). Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8365-3564-9.
  • Bony, Anne (2012). L'Architecture Moderne (in French). Larousse. ISBN 978-2-03-587641-6.
  • Taschen, Aurelia; Taschen, Balthazar (2016). L'Architecture Moderne de A à Z (in French). Bibliotheca Universalis. ISBN 978-3-8365-5630-9.
  • Prina, Francesca; Demaratini, Demartini (2006). Petite encyclopédie de l'architecture (in French). Solar. ISBN 2-263-04096-X.
  • Hopkins, Owen (2014). Les styles en architecture- guide visuel (in French). Dunod. ISBN 978-2-10-070689-1.
  • De Bure, Gilles (2015). Architecture contemporaine- le guide (in French). Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-134385-6.

Further reading

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[edit]

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