The Lord Foster of Thames Bank

Norman Foster in 2008
Born
Norman Robert Foster

(1935-06-01) 1 June 1935
Reddish, Stockport, England
Alma materUniversity of Manchester
Yale University
OccupationArchitect
Spouses
(m. 1964; died 1989)
    Begum Sabiha Rumani Malik
    (m. 1991; div. 1995)
      Children5
      Awards
      PracticeFoster + Partners
      Buildings
      ProjectsAmerican Air Museum at the Imperial War Museum Duxford
      Websitewww.normanfosterfoundation.org

      Norman Robert Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank, OM, RA, HonFREng (born 1 June 1935) is a British architect and designer. Closely associated with the development of high-tech architecture, Foster is recognised as a key figure in British modernist architecture. His architectural practice Foster + Partners, first founded in 1967 as Foster Associates, is the largest in the United Kingdom, and maintains offices internationally. He is the president of the Norman Foster Foundation, created to 'promote interdisciplinary thinking and research to help new generations of architects, designers and urbanists to anticipate the future'. The foundation, which opened in June 2017, is based in Madrid[2] and operates globally. Foster was awarded the Pritzker Prize in 1999.

      Early life and education

      Norman Robert Foster was born in 1935 in Reddish, two miles (3.2 km) north of Stockport, then a part of Lancashire. He was the only child of Robert and Lilian Foster (née Smith). The family moved to Levenshulme, near Manchester, where they lived in poverty.[3][4] His father was a machine painter at the Metropolitan-Vickers works in Trafford Park, which influenced Norman to take up engineering, design, and, ultimately, architecture.[5][6] His mother worked in a local bakery.[7] Foster's parents were diligent and hard workers who often had neighbours and family members look after her son, which Foster later believed restricted his relationship with his mother and father.[8]

      Foster attended Burnage Grammar School for Boys in Burnage, where he was bullied by fellow pupils and took up reading.[5] He considered himself quiet and awkward in his early years.[9] At 16, he left school and passed an entrance exam for a trainee scheme set up by Manchester Town Hall, which led to his first job, an office junior and clerk in the treasurer's department.[10][11][10] In 1953, Foster completed his national service in the Royal Air Force, choosing the air force because aircraft had been a longtime hobby.[12] Upon returning to Manchester, Foster went against his parents' wishes and sought employment elsewhere. He had seven O-levels by this time, and applied to work at a duplicating machine company, telling the interviewer he had applied for the prospect of a company car and a £1,000 salary.[13] Instead, he became an assistant to a contract manager at a local architects, John E. Beardshaw and Partners.[13] The staff advised him that if he wished to become an architect, he should prepare a portfolio of drawings using the perspective and shop drawings from Beardshaw's practice as an example.[14] Beardshaw was so impressed with Foster's drawings that he promoted him to the drawing department.[15]

      In 1956, Foster began study at the School of Architecture and City Planning, part of the University of Manchester. He was ineligible for a maintenance grant, so he took part-time jobs to fund his studies, including an ice-cream salesman, bouncer, and night shifts at a bakery making crumpets.[5][7][16] During this time, he also studied at the local library in Levenshulme.[17] His talent and hard work was recognised in 1959 when he won £105 and a RIBA silver medal for what he described as "a measured drawing of a windmill".[18] The windmill he drew was Bourn Windmill, Cambridgeshire.[19] After graduating in 1961,[5] Foster won the Henry Fellowship to Yale School of Architecture in New Haven, Connecticut, where he met future business partner Richard Rogers and earned his master's degree. At the suggestion of Yale art historian Vincent Scully, the pair travelled across America for a year to study architecture.[20]

      Career

      1960s–1980s

      The HSBC Building in Hong Kong

      In 1963, Foster returned to the UK and established his own architectural firm Team 4, with Rogers, Su Brumwell, and the sisters Georgie and Wendy Cheesman.[7] Among their first projects was the Cockpit, a minimalist glass bubble installed in Cornwall, the features of which became a recurring theme in Foster's future projects.[21] After the four separated in 1967, Foster and Wendy founded a new practice, Foster Associates. From 1968 to 1983, Foster collaborated with American architect Richard Buckminster Fuller on several projects that became catalysts in the development of an environmentally sensitive approach to design, such as the Samuel Beckett Theatre at St Peter's College, Oxford.[22]

      Foster Associates concentrated on industrial buildings until 1969, when the practice worked on the administrative and leisure centre for Fred. Olsen Lines based in the London Docklands, which integrated workers and managers within the same office space.[20] This was followed, in 1970, by the world's first inflatable office building for Computer Technology Limited near Hemel Hempstead, which housed 70 employees for a year.[21] The practice's breakthrough project in England followed in 1974 with the completion of the Willis Faber & Dumas headquarters in Ipswich, commissioned in 1970 and completed in 1975. The client, a family-run insurance company, wanted to restore a sense of community to the workplace. In response, Foster designed a space with modular, open plan office floors, long before open-plan became the norm, and placed a roof garden, 25-metre swimming pool, and gymnasium in the building to enhance the quality of life for the company's 1,200 employees.[23] The building has a full-height glass façade moulded to the medieval street plan and contributes drama, subtly shifting from opaque, reflective black to a glowing back-lit transparency as the sun sets. The design was inspired by the Daily Express Building in Manchester that Foster had admired as a youngster. The building is now Grade I listed.[24] The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, an art gallery and museum on the campus of the University of East Anglia, Norwich, was one of the first major public buildings to be designed by Foster, completed in 1978, and became grade II* listed in December 2012.[25]

      In 1981, Foster received a commission for the construction of a new terminal building at London's Stansted Airport. Executed by Foster + Partners, the building, recognised as a landmark work of high-tech architecture, was opened to the public in 1991, and was awarded the 1990 European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture / Mies van der Rohe Award. As part of the project's development, in 1988 Foster and British artist Brian Clarke made several proposals for an integral stained glass artwork for the terminal building; the principal proposal would have seen the walls of the terminal's east and west elevations clad in two sequences of traditionally mouth-blown, leaded glass. For complex technical and security reasons, the original scheme, which Clarke considered to be his magnum opus,[26] couldn't be executed. Though unrealised, the collaboration is historically significant for its scale, its introduction of colour and materials broadly viewed as antithetical to high-tech architecture into a key work of that movement, and for having been the first time in the history of stained glass that computer-assisted design had been utilised in the creative process.

      Foster gained a reputation for designing office buildings. In the 1980s he designed the HSBC Main Building in Hong Kong for the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (a founding member of the future HSBC Holdings plc), at the time the most expensive building ever constructed. The building is marked by its high level of light transparency, as all 3500 workers have a view to Victoria Peak or Victoria Harbour.[27] Foster said that if the firm had not won the contract it would probably have been bankrupted.

      1990s–present

      Foster lecturing in 2001
      Inside the Stansted Airport terminal in 1992

      Foster was assigned the brief for a development on the site of the Baltic Exchange, which had been damaged beyond repair by an IRA bomb, in the 1990s. Foster + Partners submitted a plan for a 385-metre-tall (1,263 ft) skyscraper, the London Millennium Tower, but its height was seen as excessive for London's skyline.[28] The proposal was scrapped and instead Foster proposed 30 St Mary Axe, popularly referred to as "the gherkin", after its shape. Foster worked with engineers to integrate complex computer systems with the most basic physical laws, such as convection. In 1999, the company was renamed Foster + Partners.

      By then, Foster's style had evolved from its earlier sophisticated, machine-influenced high-tech vision into a more sharp-edged modernity. In 2004, Foster designed the tallest bridge in the world, the Millau Viaduct in Southern France, with the Millau Mayor Jacques Godfrain stating; "The architect, Norman Foster, gave us a model of art."[29]

      Foster worked with Steve Jobs from about 2009 until Jobs' death to design the Apple offices, Apple Campus 2 (now called Apple Park), in Cupertino, California, US. Apple's board and staff continued to work with Foster as the design was completed and the construction in progress.[30] The circular building was opened to employees in April 2017, six years after Jobs died in 2011.[30][31]

      In January 2007, the Sunday Times reported that Foster had called in Catalyst, a corporate finance house, to find buyers for Foster + Partners. Foster does not intend to retire, but rather to sell his 80–90% holding in the company valued at £300 million to £500 million.[32] In 2007, he worked with Philippe Starck and Sir Richard Branson of the Virgin Group for the Virgin Galactic plans.[33]

      Foster currently sits on the board of trustees at architectural charity Article 25 who design, construct and manage innovative, safe, sustainable buildings in some of the most inhospitable and unstable regions of the world. He has also been on the Board of Trustees of The Architecture Foundation. Foster believes that attracting young talent is essential, and is proud that the average age of people working for Foster and Partners is 32, just like it was in 1967.[20]

      In May 2022, it was announced that Foster would help plan reconstruction in Ukraine after the end of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[34]

      Personal life

      Family

      Foster has been married three times. His first wife, Wendy Cheesman, one of the four founders of Team 4, died from cancer in 1989.[35] From 1991 to 1995, Foster was married to Begum Sabiha Rumani Malik. The marriage ended in divorce.[5] In 1996, Foster married Spanish psychologist and art curator Elena Ochoa.[7][36] He has five children; two of the four sons he had with Cheesman are adopted.[7][18][37]

      Health

      In the 2000s, Foster was diagnosed with bowel cancer and was told he had weeks to live.[38] He received chemotherapy treatment and made a full recovery.[37] He also suffered a heart attack.[36]

      Honours

      Foster was made a Knight Bachelor in the 1990 Birthday Honours, and thereby granted the title Sir.[39] He was appointed to the Order of Merit (OM) in 1997.[40] In the 1999 Birthday Honours, Foster's elevation to the peerage was announced and he was raised to the peerage as Baron Foster of Thames Bank, of Reddish in the County of Greater Manchester in July.[41][42]

      Foster was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA) on 19 May 1983, and a Royal Academician (RA) on 26 June 1991.[43] In 1995, he was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (HonFREng).[44] On 24 April 2017, he was given the Freedom of the City of London.[45] The Bloomberg London building received a Stirling Prize in October 2018.[46]

      Recognition

      Foster received The Lynn S. Beedle Lifetime Achievement Award from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat in 2007 to honour his contributions to the advancement of tall buildings.[47]

      He was awarded the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, for the University of Technology Petronas in Malaysia,[48][49] and in 2008 he was granted an honorary degree from the Dundee School of Architecture at the University of Dundee. In 2009, he received the Prince of Asturias Award in the category 'Arts'. In 2017, he received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement presented by Awards Council member Lord Jacob Rothschild during the International Achievement Summit in London.[50][51] In 2012, Foster was among the British cultural figures selected by artist Sir Peter Blake to appear in a new version of his most famous artwork – the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover – to celebrate the British cultural figures of his life that he most admires.[52][53]

      Works

      Arms

      Coat of arms of Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank
      Crest
      A Pier of the Millennium Bridge over the River Thames proper.
      Escutcheon
      Azure on a pile reversed throughout engrailed argent a pile reversed throughout engrailed azure with five chevronels reversed or surmounted by a pile reversed throughout argent.
      Supporters
      On either side statant upon the base of a pier of the Millennium Bridge over the River Thames argent a heron sable.
      Motto
      The Only Constant Is Change[54]
      Orders
      Order of Merit

      See also

      References

      1. "List of Fellows - Royal Academy of Engineering". Royal Academy of Engineering. Archived from the original on 21 May 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
      2. "Home page". Norman Foster Foundation.
      3. Sudjic 2010, p. 11.
      4. Moore, Rowan (23 May 2010). "Norman Foster: A Life in Architecture by Deyan Sudjic". The Observer. London. Retrieved 6 October 2011.
      5. 1 2 3 4 5 Glancey, Jonathan (2 January 1999). "The Guardian Profile: Sir Norman Foster: The master builder". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
      6. "Taller, higher, bigger, Foster". The Guardian. London. 24 October 2005. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
      7. 1 2 3 4 5 von Hase, Bettina (16 January 1999). "Foster's brew". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 26 February 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
      8. Sudjic 2010, p. 19.
      9. "Book review: Norman Foster: A Life in Architecture". The Scotsman. 13 June 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2011.
      10. 1 2 Sudjic 2010, p. 27.
      11. "Lord Norman Foster Biography and Interview". achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
      12. Sudjic 2010, p. 34.
      13. 1 2 Sudjic 2010, p. 36.
      14. Sudjic 2010, p. 39.
      15. Sudjic 2010, p. 40.
      16. "Norman Foster: Building the future". BBC News. 9 May 2000. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
      17. Thistlethwaite, Laura (30 October 2008). "Architect's Levenshulme inpsiration [sic]". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
      18. 1 2 Glancey, Jonathan (6 October 1996). "Reaching for the sky". The Independent. Archived from the original on 21 June 2022. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
      19. "Norman Foster backs campaign to save Bourn Mill". BBC News Online. 7 April 2022. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
      20. 1 2 3 How much does your building weigh, Mr. Foster? Archived 4 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Sternstunde Kultur, Schweizer Fernsehen, 4 December 2011.
      21. 1 2 "Norman Foster - 1999 Laureate - Biography" (PDF). The Pritzker Architecture Prize. 1999. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
      22. "Samuel Brackett Theatre – The Project". Foster + Partners. Archived from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
      23. "Lord Norman Foster portrait". The Daily Telegraph. London. 24 June 2008. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
      24. "The Willis Building, non Civil Parish - 1237417 | Historic England".
      25. "Sainsbury Centre, attached walkway, underground loading bay, and retaining walls to loading bay access road at the University of East Anglia, non Civil Parish - 1409810 | Historic England".
      26. Powell, Kenneth (1994). Brian Clarke: Architectural Artist. Academy Editions. p. 13. ISBN 1-85490-343-8.
      27. Treiber, Daniel (1995). Norman Foster. E & FN Spon. p. 76.
      28. "London Millennium Tower". Emporis. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
      29. "France shows off tallest bridge". BBC News. 14 December 2004. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
      30. 1 2 Levy, Steven (16 May 2017). "One More Thing: Inside Apple's Insanely Great (or Just Insane) New Mothership". Wired. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
      31. "Why Steve Jobs Tapped Norman Foster to Design Apple's Future HQ". Bloomberg News. 4 April 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
      32. Hamilton, Fiona (21 January 2007). "Foster puts £500m firm up for sale". The Times. London.
      33. Carré d'Art, Jean-Pierre Thiollet, Anagramme Ed., 2008, p. 134
      34. "Star architect Foster to help plan Ukraine reconstruction". Reuters. 6 May 2022. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
      35. "Norman Foster: Man of steel". The Independent. 9 September 2006. Archived from the original on 21 June 2022. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
      36. 1 2 Barber, Timothy (24 May 2017). "Lord Foster: 'I'm like a hamster on a treadmill. I'm always moving, I never stop". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
      37. 1 2 Glancey, Jonathan (29 June 2010). "Norman Foster at 75: Norman's conquests". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
      38. Mark, Laura (27 April 2016). "Exclusive building study: Maggie's Manchester by Foster + Partners". Architects Journal. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
      39. "No. 52173". The London Gazette. 15 June 1990. p. 2.
      40. "No. 54962". The London Gazette. 28 November 1997. p. 13399.
      41. "No. 55565". The London Gazette. 28 July 1999. p. 8128.
      42. "No. 24643". The Edinburgh Gazette. 23 July 1999. p. 1551.
      43. "Norman Foster RA". Royal Academy of Arts. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
      44. "List of Fellows – Foster". Royal Academy of Engineering. Archived from the original on 17 November 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
      45. Gill, Oliver (25 April 2017). "Wembley and Gherkin architect Norman Foster given freedom of the City of London". City A.M. Archived from the original on 25 April 2017. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
      46. Wainwright, Oliver (10 October 2018). "Norman Foster's Bloomberg office in London wins Stirling prize". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
      47. "2007 Lynn S. Beedle Award Winner". Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. Archived from the original on 6 September 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
      48. "The Tenth Award Cycle 2005–2007". The Aga Khan Development Network. Archived from the original on 23 January 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2009.
      49. "Petronas University of Technology receives 2007 Aga Khan Award for Architecture". Foster + Partners. 9 April 2007. Archived from the original on 9 April 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2009.
      50. "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
      51. "2017 Summit Highlights Photo: Awards Council member Lord Jacob Rothschild presents the Golden Plate Award to British architect Lord Norman Foster". Academy of Achievement.
      52. "New faces on Sgt Pepper album cover for artist Peter Blake's 80th birthday". The Guardian. 5 October 2016.
      53. "Sir Peter Blake's new Beatles' Sgt Pepper's album cover". BBC News. 8 November 2016.
      54. Morris, Susan (20 April 2020). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage 2019. London: Debrett's. ISBN 9781999767051.

      Bibliography

      • Sudjic, Deyan (2010). Norman Foster: A Life in Architecture. Weidenfeld. ISBN 978-0-297-85868-3.

      Documentaries

      • How Much Does Your Building Weigh, Mr. Foster? (dir. Carlos Carcass and Norberto Lopez Amado, 2010, 78 minutes)
      • Striving for Simplicity (Producer: Marc-Christoph Wagner, Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2015, 41 minutes)
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