Pritzker Prize
Related Category: Architecture
(prĭt´skər), officially The Pritzker Architecture Prize, award for excellence in architecture, given annually since 1979. Largely modeled on the
Nobel Prize, it is the premier architectural award in the United States and is named for the family that sponsors the Chicago-based Hyatt Foundation. Architects who have won the prize are: 1979, Philip
Johnson (United States); 1980, Louis Barragan (Mexico); 1981, James
Stirling (Great Britain); 1982, Kevin Roche (United States); 1983, I. M.
Pei (United States); 1984, Richard
Meier (United States); 1985, Hans Hollein (Austria); 1986, Gottfried Boehm (Germany); 1987, Kenzo
Tange (Japan); 1988, Gordon
Bunshaft (United States) and Oscar
Niemeyer Soares (Brazil); 1989, Frank
Gehry (United States); 1990, Aldo
Rossi (Italy); 1991, Robert
Venturi (United States); 1992, Alvaro Siza (Portugal); 1993, Fumihiko Maki (Japan); 1994, Christian de Portzamparc (France); 1995, Tadao
Ando (Japan); 1996, Rafael
Moneo (Spain); 1997, Sverre Fehn (Norway); 1998, Renzo
Piano (Italy); 1999, Norman
Foster (Great Britain); 2000, Rem
Koolhaas (Netherlands); 2001, Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron (Switzerland); 2002, Glenn Murcutt (Australia); 2003, Jørn Utzon (Denmark); 2004, Zaha
Hadid (Great Britain), the first female recipient; 2005, Thom Mayne (United States); 2006, Paulo Mendes da Rocha (Brazil); and 2007, Richard Rogers (Great Britain).
See study by M. Thorne (1999).