Ricardo Scofidio, Boldly Imaginative Architect, Is Dead at 89

Ricardo Scofidio, who with his wife, Elizabeth Diller, brought a conceptual art sensibility to architecture in designing some of the world’s most innovative concert halls, museums, academic buildings and parks, including, with partners, the High Line in Manhattan, died on Thursday in Manhattan.He was 89.His sons Gino and Ian Scofidio confirmed his death, in a hospital.

They did not cite a specific cause.Mr.Scofidio and Ms.

Diller founded the firm now called Diller Scofidio + Renfro in New York in 1979.Operating out of a gritty East Village studio, they became known for their inventive ideas about how architecture could alternately challenge and enhance perceptions, and in 1999 they became the first architects to be awarded MacArthur Foundation “genius” grants.Twenty-five years later, the firm employed about 100 architects and often made the short list as candidates for the world’s most prestigious cultural and institutional commissions.

Calm and soft-spoken, Mr.Scofidio maintained his focus on the details that could make or break a building.“I’m always a little shocked when people try to make me realize we’re a big firm doing big projects,” he told Architectural Digest in 2019, “because that was not the goal.”We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

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Publisher: The New York Times

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