Mansilla+Tuñón

Mansilla+Tuñón Architects
Practice information
Key architects Luis M. Mansilla
Emilio Tuñon Álvarez
Location Madrid, Spain
Founded 1992
Work
Buildings MUSAC
Auditorio Ciudad de León
Museo Provincial de Zamora
Projects Royal Collections Museum, Madrid
Awards European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture (Mies van der Rohe Award) (2007)[1]
Premio de Arquitectura Española (Spanish Architecture Prize)[2] (2003)

Mansilla+Tuñón Architects is a Spanish architecture firm founded in Madrid in 1992 by Luis Moreno Mansilla (Madrid, 1959–2012) and Emilio Tuñón (Madrid, 1958). In 2014, Mansilla + Tuñón Architects is awarded the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts (Spain) by the Ministry of Culture of Spain.

Royal Collections Museum in Madrid
Museum of Zamora, Spain
Museum of Cantabria Project.
Aerial view of MUSAC

Perhaps their most famous work to date is the MUSAC of León, Spain, the building that won the 2007 European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture (Mies van der Rohe Award). They have also won the public competitions to build the C.I.C.C.M. New Convention Palace in Madrid (2007), as well as the Museo de las Colecciones Reales (Spanish Royal Collections Museum), also in Madrid.

They are teachers at the ETSAM school in Madrid and have taught at the Graduate School of Design in Harvard University, the EPFL in Lausanne, the Nueva Escuela de Arquitectura in Puerto Rico, the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main, and currently at the School of Architecture at Princeton University.

Their works has been widely published and exhibited in some of the most prestigious magazines, book editions and museums in the world. In 2009 they directed the Biennial X of Spanish Architecture.

Notable works

Competition success

Recognition and awards

Selected publications

Gallery

References

  1. http://www.miesbcn.com/en/award.html
  2. http://www.cscae.com/consejo/obras2003.html

External links

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