Michel Weill

Michel Weill
Born 1914
Died 2001
Nationality French
Work
Buildings Musée d'art moderne André-Malraux

Michel Weill (1914–2001) was a French architect who co-founded the Atelier LWD with Guy Lagneau and Jean Dimitrijevic, and was involved in many major projects in France and Africa.[1] He worked with Lagneau and Dimitrijevic on the Musée-Maison de la Culture at Le Havre, a glass box surrounded by mechanical solar-control devices.[2] Another project with Lagneau and Dimitrijevic was the Hôtel de France in Conakry, Guinea, a long building flanked by a rotunda. It was built of reinforced concrete panels with aluminum shutters.[3]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ Florence Lypsky (4 November 2010). "Hommage à Jean Dimitrijevic". Academie d'Architecture. http://www.aa.archi.fr/article105.html. Retrieved 2011-03-21. 
  2. ^ Sir Banister Fletcher, Dan Cruickshank (1996). Sir Banister Fletcher's a history of architecture. Architectural Press. p. 1372. ISBN 0750622679. http://books.google.ca/books?id=Gt1jTpXAThwC&pg=PA1372. 
  3. ^ "Hôtel de France à Conakry". L'Architecture d'aujourd'hui 70: 18–19. 1957 , January. http://archires.documentation.equipement.gouv.fr/document.xsp?id=Archires-0081853&qid=sdx_q0&n=1&q=. Retrieved 2011-03-22.