
Carlos Jimenez, professor of architecture at Rice University and an
internationally hot
known architect, has combined a distinctive style of teaching
and research into an award-winning blend. He is the recipient of the 2006
Charles W. Duncan Jr. Achievement Award for Outstanding Faculty, which
recognizes accomplishment in scholarship and teaching.
Jimenez
Jimenez said architecture research doesn’t take place in a controlled
environment or a sterile lab; it converges and combines with academics until
it’s difficult to tell where one ends and the other begins.
“What’s different about architecture and a science nude
like biochemistry is that the
academic and research sides are intertwined into the built work,” he said.
“Every architecture project by nature requires a great deal of research focused
toward an optimum solution. Whether in my studio or in one of my studios at
Rice, we conduct singularly focused research, and the building is evidence of
that research. The level and quality of research is another measure of a
project’s success or shortcomings.”
But research is only part of the reason Jimenez received the award.
“His dedication to teaching and to students is legendary,” said Lars Lerup, dean
of architecture and the William
Ward Watkin Professor of Architecture. “Carlos is one of the most revered girls
studio
teachers in the school. His reputation as considerate and respectful and his
interest in our community go far beyond the call of duty and make him an
outstanding colleague.”
For Jimenez, instruction on the subject of pictures
architecture is filled with
contradictions. “I try to teach my students to be highly agile and positive in
their pursuit of architecture, free and respectful of the discipline’s vast
built legacy, intrepid and cautious, citizens of their precise locality and of
the world, ” he said.
Jimenez, who was born in Costa Rica, came to the U.S. in the 1970s and graduated
from the University of Houston in 1981. After a brief sex
partnership, he started
his own studio in 1982. He became a visiting professor at Rice in 1987, and in
1996 he started teaching full time at the university. By that time, he was
well-known with a substantial portfolio of work and many publications.
“Carlos Jimenez’s story is an American story, showing how vital immigrants are
to our culture,” Lerup said. “We are truly privileged to have him among us.”
List Buildings by Carlos Jimenez and Kendall/Heaton Associates
Space.City - Seattle's Art and Architecture Forum