Paul Goldberger
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Paul Goldberger (born in 1950 in Passaic, New Jersey) is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic. He is well known for his "Sky Line" column in The New Yorker.
Shortly after starting as a writer at The New York Times in 1972, he was assigned to write the obituary of architect Louis Kahn, who died suddenly of a heart attack in a bathroom in New York's Pennsylvania Station. The next year, he was named the paper's architecture critic.
In 1984 Goldberger won the Pulitzer, the highest award given in journalism, for his architecture criticism in The Times. In 1996, New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani presented him with the city’s Preservation Achievement Award in recognition of the impact of his work on historic preservation.
From July 2004 until June of 2006, he served as the Dean of Parsons The New School for Design (formerly The Parsons School of Design). He retains a tenured position as the Joseph Urban professor of Design at Parsons.
He is the author of the book Up from Zero: Politics, Architecture, and the Rebuilding of New York. Also, in a May 2005 New Yorker column, he suggested that the best solution for rebuilding at Ground Zero would focus on residential use mixed with cultural and memorial elements.
A resident of the Upper West Side of Manhattan, Goldberger is married to Susan Solomon and has three sons, Adam, Ben and Alex. He is a graduate of Yale University, and was a member of Wolf's Head Society.