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'''Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis''' is an award-winning architecture partnership founded in 1997 by Paul Lewis, Marc Tsurumaki and David J. Lewis, located in New York City.


The firm received a 2007 National Design Award from the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum and was selected as one of six American architectural firms featured in the U.S. Pavilion at the 2004 Venice Architecture Biennale. LTL was included in the 2000 National Design Triennial at the Cooper-Hewitt and was selected in December 2000 by Architectural Record as one of ten firms representing a “Vanguard in Contemporary Architecture.” LTL Architects' drawings are housed in the [[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art]] and the Heinz Architectural Center, [[Carnegie Museum of Art]] permanent collections.

Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis are co-authors of two books, the monograph Opportunistic Architecture (Princeton Architectural Press, 2008) and Situation Normal....Pamphlet Architecture #21 (Princeton Architectural Press, 1998).

== Partner Background ==
'''Paul Lewis''' (born 1966) received a Bachelor of Arts from [[Wesleyan University]] in 1988 and a Master of Architecture from [[Princeton University]] School of Architecture in 1992. He is a fellow of the [[American Academy in Rome]] and the winner of the 1998-1999 Mercedes T. Bass [[Rome Prize]] in Architecture. He is an Assistant Professor and Director of Graduate Studies at Princeton University School of Architecture. Paul is a Board Member of the [[Architectural League of New York]].

'''Marc Tsurumaki''' (born 1965) received his Bachelor of Science in Architecture from the [[University of Virginia School of Architecture]] in 1987 and a Master of Architecture from [[Princeton University]] School of Architecture in 1991. He is an Adjunct Professor of Architecture at [[Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation]]. He was the Fall 2006 Louis I. Kahn Visiting Assistant Professor at Yale University. Marc has been a Trustee of the Van Alen Institute since 2002.

'''David J. Lewis''' (born 1966) received a Bachelor of Arts from [[Carleton College]] in 1988, a Master of Arts in the History of Architecture and Urbanism from [[Cornell University]] in 1992, and a Master of Architecture from [[Princeton University]] School of Architecture in 1995. David is as Associate Professor of Architecture at Parsons The New School for Design, where he served as Director of the Master of Architecture program from 2002-2007.

== Select Projects ==
===Completed===
*Bornhuetter Hall, [[The College of Wooster]], Wooster, Ohio (2004)
*Fluff Bakery, New York, NY (2004)
*Xing Restaurant, New York, NY (2005). Winner of the James Beard Foundation Award for Outstanding Restaurant Design (2007)
*Ini Ani Coffee Shop, New York, NY
*Office of Strategic Assessment, Planning and Design, New York University, New York, New York (2007)

===In Progress===
*Arthouse at the Jones Center, Austin, Texas (in progress)
*Nazareth House, Nazareth, Pennsylvania
*Villa, Ordos, Inner Mongolia - 100 international architecture firms selected in 2008 to design 1,000 square meter villas for [http://ordos100.com/ Ordos 100].

===Speculative Projects===
*New Suburbanism (2000/2004)
*Tourbus Hotel (2002)
*Great Egyptian Museum (2002)
*Park Tower (2004)
*Hudson Square (2007)


== References ==
*Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis. ''Opportunistic Architecture''. New York: Princeton Architectural Press (2008).
*Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis. ''Situation Normal...Pamphlet Architecture 21''. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1998.
Gendall, John. “LTL Gets Creative with Arthouse in Austin.” Architectural Record, March 2008.
Nobel, Philip. “Awards: In Design Awards, Something Old And Something New.” The New York Times, 17 May 2007, F3. National Design Award
Jodidio, Philip. “Xing Restaurant,” and “Arthouse at the Jones Center.” In Architecture in the United States, 98–107. London: Taschen, 2006.
Jodidio, Philip. “Fluff Bakery,” and “Bornhuetter Hall.” In Architecture Now 4, 274–381. London: Taschen, 2006.
Lubell, Sam. “Architectural Record Curating Venice Architecture Biennale’s American Pavilion.” Architectural Record, August 2004, 32. Parking Sections

== External links ==
[http://www.LTLarchitects.com LTL Architects Homepage]

{{US-architect-stub}}

[[Category:Architecture firms of the United States]]

Revision as of 17:10, 6 March 2008