Bjarke Ingels Is Reshaping The World As We Know It

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BIG currently has 50 projects in advancement, with 20 of them under building and construction, amongst them highly adaptable headquarters for Google in California and London (in partnership with the British designer Thomas Heatherwick); a modular school for WeWork's brand-new instructional business, WeGrow; a boundary-pushing high-speed transportation system for Elon Musk's Hyperloop One; and a sprawling, $2 billion campus master plan for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Some of BIG's newest efforts, such as chef René Redzepi's freshly moved and resumed Noma dining establishment-- an unusually subtle, advanced, detail-oriented task for BIG-- and the beastly, brawny Amager Resource Center (or ARC) waste-to-energy plant, exhibit the firm's vast and efficient operation today.
BIG has no single architectural "relocation" it duplicates, though each of its structures plays with strong, and often even spectacular, architectural statements. Now in the world-leading area of architectural juggernauts like OMA, Herzog & de Meuron, and Foster + Partners, BIG develops structures that come with surprises, and that, more often than not, capture the creativity.
Bjarke Ingels, founding partner of bjarke ingels nyc Ingels Group.
Ingels has actually constructed a fawning worldwide audience, one that reaches far beyond the ivory tower of architecture. And though his ideas may certainly be huge and tough to develop, he has the tenaciousness, suaveness, and drive to see them through to the finish line.

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