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{{Short description|American architectural firm based in Hamden, Connecticut}}
{{More citations needed|date=February 2012}}
{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo & Associates
| name = Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo & Associates
| logo = krjdalogo.jpg
| logo = krjdalogo.jpg
| type = LLC
| type = LLC
| genre =
| genre = Architecture
| predecessor =
| predecessor =
| foundation = [[Hamden, Connecticut|Hamden]], [[Connecticut]], United States ({{Start date|1966}})
| foundation = [[Hamden, Connecticut|Hamden]], [[Connecticut]], United States ({{Start date|1966}})
| founder = [[Kevin Roche]] and John Dinkeloo
| founder = [[Kevin Roche]] and John Dinkeloo
| location_city = [[Hamden, Connecticut|Hamden]], [[Connecticut]]
| location_city = [[New Haven, Connecticut|New Haven]], [[Connecticut]]
| location_country = United States
| location_country = United States
| location =
| location =
| locations =
| locations =
| area_served = International
| area_served = International
| key_people = [[Kevin Roche]] AIA, FAIA Philip Kinsella, AlA and James Owens
| key_people = Principals: [[Kevin Roche]] AIA FAIA.
Steuart Gray AIA.
| industry = [[Architecture]]
Wesley Kavanagh AIA.
| products =
Directors: Eamon Roche, Stephen Metzger, Jerome Boryca, Thomas Frechette, Jason Hickey, and Marilyn Gillon.
| services = [[Architecture]], Building Services/MEP [[Engineering]], Graphics, [[Interior Design]], [[Structural Engineering]], [[Civil Engineering]], [[Sustainable Design]] and [[Urban Design]] & Planning
| industry = [[Architecture]]
| revenue =
| products =
| services = [[Architecture]], Building Services/MEP [[Engineering]], Graphics, [[Interior Design]], [[Structural Engineering]], [[Civil Engineering]], [[Sustainable Design]] and [[Urban Design]] & Planning
| revenue =
| operating_income =
| operating_income =
| net_income =
| net_income =
| equity =
| equity =
| owner =
| owner =
| num_employees =
| num_employees = 50
| parent =
| parent =
| divisions =
| divisions =
| subsid =
| subsid =
| homepage = {{URL|www.krjda.com}}
| homepage = {{URL|www.krjda.com}}
| footnotes =
| footnotes =
| intl =
| intl =
}}
}}


'''Roche Dinkeloo''', otherwise known as '''Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates LLC (KRJDA)''', is an [[architectural firm]] based in [[Hamden, Connecticut]] founded in 1966. In 2020, it relocated to [[New Haven, Connecticut|New Haven]], [[Connecticut]], and took the name Roche Modern.
{{Refimprove|date=February 2012}}

'''Roche-Dinkeloo''', otherwise known as '''Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates LLC (KRJDA)''', is an [[architectural firm]] based in [[Hamden, Connecticut]] founded in 1966.
==About==
The principal designers were 1982 [[Pritzker Prize]] laureate [[Kevin Roche]] (June 1922 – 2019),<ref>{{Cite news|last=Goldberger|first=Paul|date=2019-03-03|title=Kevin Roche, Architect Who Melded Bold With Elegant, Dies at 96 (Published 2019)|language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/02/arts/kevin-roche-dead-architect.html|access-date=2021-01-08|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> with John Dinkeloo—a graduate of the [[Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning|University of Michigan]]—as the expert in construction and technology. After Roche's death, the firm relaunched in 2020 as Roche Modern under director Jerry Boryca and managing director Eamon Roche.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Firm |url=https://www.rochemodern.com/firm |access-date=2022-03-22 |website=Roche Modern |language=en-US}}</ref> The firm is now based out of New Haven, CT.


The principal designer is 1982 [[Pritzker Prize]] laureate [[Kevin Roche]], with John Dinkeloo &mdash; a graduate of the [[Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning|University of Michigan]] &mdash; as the expert in construction and technology.
Roche and Dinkeloo both previously worked with [[Eero Saarinen]]. Almost all buildings built by Roche are with this firm, and they exhibit his particular architecture and aesthetic, although it has changed wildly throughout the past 40 years. Earlier buildings were characterized by massive facades and experimentation with exposed steel and concrete, while more recent buildings emphasize a clean, glassy look suggesting futuristic and [[green architecture]]. The firm also built in [[postmodern architecture|postmodern]] and [[Historicism (art)|historicist]] styles during the early 1990s.
Roche and Dinkeloo both previously worked with [[Eero Saarinen]]. Almost all buildings built by Roche are with this firm, and they exhibit his particular architecture and aesthetic, although it has changed wildly throughout the past 40 years. Earlier buildings were characterized by massive facades and experimentation with exposed steel and concrete, while more recent buildings emphasize a clean, glassy look suggesting futuristic and [[green architecture]]. The firm also built in [[postmodern architecture|postmodern]] and [[Historicism (art)|historicist]] styles during the early 1990s.


{{quotation |According to the company website:
"KRJDA is engaged in major projects throughout the United States, Europe and Asia and provides complete master planning, programming, architectural design, interior design, working drawings, specification and construction administration services. The firm has designed a variety of institutional and corporate projects including 38 corporate headquarters, three hotel/apartment buildings, eight museums, numerous research facilities, theaters, schools, factories, performing arts centers, houses and the Central Park Zoo in New York. For the past 42 years, he has been the architect for the master plan and expansion of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, designing all of its new wings and installing many of its collections." <ref>http://www.krjda.com/about/</ref>
<blockquote>KRJDA is engaged in major projects throughout the United States, Europe and Asia and provides complete master planning, programming, architectural design, interior design, working drawings, specification and construction administration services. The firm has designed a variety of institutional and corporate projects including 38 corporate headquarters, three hotel/apartment buildings, eight museums, numerous research facilities, theaters, schools, factories, performing arts centers, houses and the Central Park Zoo in New York. For the past 42 years, he has been the architect for the master plan and expansion of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, designing all of its new wings and installing many of its collections.</blockquote>}}


The firm received the American Institute of Architects 1974 Architectural Firm Award and in 1995 the firm was the recipient of the American Institute of Architect’s 25-Year Award for the Ford Foundation Headquarters in New York City. In 1982, Kevin Roche received the [[Pritzker Prize]] and in 1993, he received the [[AIA Gold Medal]].<ref>http://www.krjda.com/about/</ref>
The firm received the American Institute of Architects 1974 Architectural Firm Award and in 1995 the firm was the recipient of the American Institute of Architect's 25-Year Award for the [[Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice|Ford Foundation Headquarters]] in New York City. In 1982, Kevin Roche received the [[Pritzker Prize]]<ref>{{Cite web|title=Kevin Roche {{!}} The Pritzker Architecture Prize|url=https://www.pritzkerprize.com/laureates/1982|access-date=2021-01-08|website=www.pritzkerprize.com}}</ref> and in 1993, he received the [[AIA Gold Medal]]. In 2015 Kevin Roche received the [[George M. White]] Award from the American Architectural Foundation.


[[Kevin Roche]] has been referred to as the "first [architect] to see architecture and nature as one." <ref>Pelkonen, Eeva-Lissa. "Kevin Roche: Architecture As Environment." New Haven: Yale University Press. 2011.</ref>
[[Kevin Roche]] has been referred to as the "first [architect] to see architecture and nature as one."<ref>Pelkonen, Eeva-Lissa. ''Kevin Roche: Architecture As Environment''. New Haven: Yale University Press. 2011.</ref>


<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:lafayette1.jpg|thumb|right| Lafayette Tower is the first commercial office building in Washington, DC to receive LEED CS Platinum certification.]] -->
[[File:bouygues1.jpg|thumb|right| The Head Office for Bouygues SA Holding company received the "Haute Qualité Environnementale (HQE)" which is the highest certification for environmental quality in building design in France.]]


[[File:Santander headquarters, Madrid.jpg|thumb|right| Headquarters for Santander Central Hispano located in Madrid, Spain.]]
[[File:bouygues1.jpg|thumb|right| The Head Office for Bouygues SA Holding company received the “Haute Qualité Environnementale (HQE)” which is the highest certification for environmental quality in building design in France.]]

[[File:santander1.jpg|thumb|right| Headquarters for Santander Central Hispano located in Madrid, Spain.]]


[[File:lucent1.jpg|thumb|right| The continuous glass wall at Lucent Technologies in Nuremberg, Germany wraps around the complex to create a unified street facade.]]
[[File:lucent1.jpg|thumb|right| The continuous glass wall at Lucent Technologies in Nuremberg, Germany wraps around the complex to create a unified street facade.]]


[[File:ford1.jpg|thumb|right| Unlike conventional New York office buildings which isolate the occupants, the Ford Foundation Headquarters creates an environment of openness and fosters a sense of working family.]]
[[File:ford1.jpg|thumb|right| The [[Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice]]]]

==Awards==
* AIA [[Architecture Firm Award]]
* [[Pritzker Prize]]
* American Institute of Architects - [[AIA Gold Medal]]
* [[American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medals]] - Gold Medal Award for Architecture
* Academie d'Architecture - Grand Gold Medal
* Total Design Award, [[American Society of Interior Designers]]
* Medal of Honor, New York Chapter of the AIA
* American Institute of Architects [[Twenty-five Year Award]]
* Classical America's Arthur Ross Award
* The Brendan Gill Prize of the Municipal Art Society of New York
* R. S. Reynolds Memorial Award
* New York State Award
* California Governor's Award for Excellence in Design
* Albert S. Bard First Honor Awards, City Club of New York
* Brandeis University Creative Arts Award in Architecture
* Brunner Award of the American Institute of Art and Letters
* New York Chapter American Institute of Architects Award


==Projects==
==Projects==
KRJDA has completed over 200 projects in the US and internationally. These include 8 museums, 38 institutional and corporate headquarters, 7 research laboratories, conference and performing arts centers, theaters, and campus buildings for 6 separate universities. KRJDA maintains their office in [[Hamden, Connecticut|Hamden]], [[Connecticut]].
KRJDA has completed over 200 projects in the US and internationally. These include 8 museums, 38 institutional and corporate headquarters, 7 research laboratories, conference and performing arts centers, theaters, and campus buildings for 6 separate universities. KRJDA maintains their office in [[Hamden, Connecticut|Hamden]], [[Connecticut]].


==Film==
==Green Architecture==
As designer of one of the first true green buildings in America, the [[Oakland Museum of California]], KRJDA has defined architectural sustainability and green design as we know it today. Additionally, Mr. Roche is the architect of Lafayette Tower, the first LEED ([[Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design]])CS Platinum building in Washington, D.C. The design for the Head Office for Bouygues SA Holding Company in Paris, France, received the prestigious NF Bâtiments tertiaires – Démarché HQE (Haute Qualité Environmentale) for highest environmental quality in building design. Additionally Roche's design for [[Santander Group]] in Madrid, Spain has offers is reputed to be the world's largest green roof over 1,000,000 square feet.<ref>http://www.krjda.com/about/</ref>


A feature documentary about [[Kevin Roche]] and his work, called ''Kevin Roche: The Quiet Architect'' was released in 2017. It is directed by Irish filmmaker (ex-architecture student) Mark Noonan whose 2015 debut feature [[You're Ugly Too]] starred [[Aidan Gillen]] and was met with critical acclaim.
===Notable Buildings===


==Notable buildings==
*1968 - The [[Ford Foundation]], New York, NY
* 1968 – The [[Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice]], New York, NY
*1969 - [[Oakland Museum of California]], Oakland, CA
* 1969 – [[Oakland Museum of California]], Oakland, CA
*1969 - Administration, Student Union & Physical Education Buildings, [[RIT]], Rochester, NY
* 1969 – Administration, Student Union & Physical Education Buildings, [[RIT]], Rochester, NY
*1969 - The [[Knights of Columbus Building (New Haven, Connecticut)|Knights of Columbus Building]] Headquarters, New Haven, CT
* 1969 – The [[Knights of Columbus Building (New Haven, Connecticut)|Knights of Columbus Building]] Headquarters, New Haven, CT
*1969 - United States Post Office, [[Columbus, IN]]
* 1969 – United States Post Office, [[Columbus, IN]]
*1969 - Aetna Life and Casualty Company Computer Headquarters, Hartford, CT
* 1969 – Aetna Life and Casualty Company Computer Headquarters, Hartford, CT
*1971 - Power Center for the Performing Arts, [[University of Michigan]], Ann Arbor, MI
*1973 - Center for the Arts, [[Wesleyan University]], Middletown, CT
* 1971 – Power Center for the Performing Arts, [[University of Michigan]], Ann Arbor, MI
*1974 - Fine Arts Center, [[University of Massachusetts Amherst]], Amherst, MA
* 1973 Center for the Arts, [[Wesleyan University]], Middletown, CT
* 1974 – [[Fine Arts Center (Amherst, Massachusetts)|Fine Arts Center]], [[University of Massachusetts Amherst]], Amherst, MA
*1974 - [[The Pyramids (Indianapolis)]] College Life Insurance Company of America Headquarters, Indianapolis, IN
* 1974 – [[The Pyramids (Indianapolis)]] College Life Insurance Company of America Headquarters, Indianapolis, IN
*1978 - [[John Deere World Headquarters]] West Office Building, Moline, IN
* 1974 – [[Worcester Plaza]], Worcester, MA
*1979 - [[Denver Performing Arts Complex]], Denver, CO
* 1975 – [[One United Nations Plaza]] and [[ONE UN New York Hotel]], New York, NY
*1982 - [[One Summit Square]], Fort Wayne, IN
* 1978 – [[John Deere World Headquarters]] West Office Building, Moline, IL
*1982 - [[The Corporate Center]], Danbury, CT
* 1979 – [[Denver Performing Arts Complex]], Denver, CO
*1982 - Moudy Visual Arts and Communication Building, [[Texas Christian University]], Fort Worth, TX
* 1982 – [[One Summit Square]], Fort Wayne, IN
*1983 - United Nations Plaza, New York, NY
*1983 - [[General Foods Corporate Headquarters]], Ryebrook, NY
* 1982 – [[The Corporate Center]], Danbury, CT
* 1982 – Moudy Visual Arts and Communication Building, [[Texas Christian University]], Fort Worth, TX
*1985 - Cummins Engine Company Corporate Headquarters, Columbus, IN
* 1983 – [[Two United Nations Plaza]] and [[ONE UN New York Hotel]], New York, NY
*1985 - [[DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum]], Williamsburg, VA
*1986 - Conoco Inc. Petroleum Headquarters, Houston, TX
* 1983 [[General Foods Corporate Headquarters]], Ryebrook, NY
* 1985 – [[Cummins Corporate Office Building]], Columbus, IN
*1988 - [[Central Park Zoo]], New York, NY
* 1985 – [[DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum]], Williamsburg, VA
*1988 - Bouygues World Headquarters, Saint-Quentin-Yvelines, France
*1989 - [[Leo Burnett Building]] Company Headquarters, Chicago, IL
* 1986 – [[Conoco]] Inc. Petroleum Headquarters, Houston, TX
*1990 - [[750 7th Avenue]], New York, NY
* 1988 – [[Central Park Zoo]], New York, NY
* 1988 – [[Bouygues]] World Headquarters, Saint-Quentin-Yvelines, France
*1990 - Metropolitano Office Building, Madrid, Spain
*1992 - J.P. Morgan Headquarters, New York, NY
* 1989 [[Leo Burnett Building]] Company Headquarters, Chicago, IL
* 1990 – [[750 Seventh Avenue]], New York, NY
*1993 - [[Corning Incorporated]] Corporate Headquarters, Corning, NY
* 1990 – Metropolitano Office Building, Madrid, Spain
*1993 - [[Merck & Co.]] Inc. Headquarters, Whitehouse Station,NJ
* 1992 – [[60 Wall Street|J.P. Morgan Tower]], New York, NY
*1993 - [[Bank of America Plaza (Atlanta)]] GA
*1993 - Borland International Corporate Headquarters, Scotts Valley, Ca
* 1993 [[Corning Incorporated]] Corporate Headquarters, Corning, NY
* 1993 – [[Merck & Co.]] Inc. [[Merck Headquarters Building|Headquarters]], Whitehouse Station, NJ
*1993 - Tanjong and Binariang Headquarters/[[Menara Maxis]], Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
* 1993 – [[Bank of America Plaza (Atlanta)]] GA
*1994 - Pontiac Marina [[Millenia Tower]] and Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Singapore
*1995 - [[Dai-ichi Life]] Headquarters/ Norinchukin Bank Headquarters, [[DN Tower 21]], Tokyo, Japan
* 1993 – [[Borland]] International Corporate Headquarters, Scotts Valley, Ca
* 1993 – Tanjong and Binariang Headquarters/[[Menara Maxis]], Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
*1997 - [[Zesiger Sports and Fitness Center]], Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
* 1994 – Pontiac Marina [[Millenia Tower]] and [[The Ritz-Carlton Millenia Singapore]]
*1997 - [[Shiodome City Center]],Tokyo, Japan
* 1995 – [[Dai-ichi Life]] Headquarters/ Norinchukin Bank Headquarters, [[DN Tower 21]], Tokyo, Japan
*1997 - Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for University Life/ [[Skirball Center for the Performing Arts]], New York University, New York, NY
* 1997 – [[Zesiger Sports and Fitness Center]], Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
*1997 - Lucent Technologies, Lisle, IL/Naperville, IL
*2000 - Ciudad [[Grupo Santander]], Madrid, Spain
* 1997 [[Shiodome City Center]], Tokyo, Japan
* 1997 – Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for University Life/ [[Skirball Center for the Performing Arts]], [[New York University]], New York, NY
*2001 - [[Securities and Exchange Commission]] Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
* 1997 – [[Lucent]] Technologies, Lisle, IL/Naperville, IL
*2002 - [[Bouygues]] SA Holding Company Headquarters, Paris, France
* 2000 – Ciudad [[Grupo Santander]], Madrid, Spain
*2003 - [[1101 New York Avenue]], Washington, D.C.
*2005 - Lafayette Tower, Washington, D.C.
* 2001 [[Securities and Exchange Commission]] Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
* 2002 – [[Bouygues]] S.A. Holding Company Headquarters, Paris, France
*2009 - [[David S. Ingalls Rink]] Restoration and Addition, Yale University, New Haven, CT
* 2003 – [[1101 New York Avenue]], Washington, D.C.
*2010 - [[Convention Centre Dublin]], Dublin, Ireland (2010)<ref>http://www.ddda.ie/index.jsp?a=1014&n=514&p=327</ref>
* 2005 – Lafayette Tower, Washington, D.C.
* 2009 – [[David S. Ingalls Rink]] Restoration and Addition, Yale University, New Haven, CT
* 2010 – [[Convention Centre Dublin]], Dublin, Ireland (2010)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ddda.ie/index.jsp?a=1014&n=514&p=327 |title=The Convention Centre Dublin – Dublin Docklands |website=www.ddda.ie |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111127064304/http://www.ddda.ie/index.jsp?p=327&n=514&a=1014 |archive-date=2011-11-27}}</ref>
* 2011 – New Galleries for the Art of the Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia, and Later South Asia at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
* 2012 – American Painting Galleries in the American Wing at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
* 2014 – Renovations to [[United Nations Development Corporation]]
* 2018 – 200/250 Massachusetts Ave [[Capitol Crossing]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.capitolcrossingdc.com/ |title=Home |website=capitolcrossingdc.com}}</ref>
* 2020 – Expansion at [[Museum of Jewish Heritage]]


==References==
==References==
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* Firm Website: [http://www.krjda.com Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates LLC]
* Firm Website: [http://www.krjda.com Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates LLC]


{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Roche-Dinkeloo buildings|*]]

[[Category:Architecture firms based in Connecticut]]
[[Category:Architecture firms based in Connecticut]]

Latest revision as of 01:19, 28 January 2024

Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo & Associates
Company typeLLC
IndustryArchitecture
GenreArchitecture
FoundedHamden, Connecticut, United States (1966 (1966))
FounderKevin Roche and John Dinkeloo
Headquarters,
United States
Area served
International
Key people
Principals: Kevin Roche AIA FAIA.

Steuart Gray AIA. Wesley Kavanagh AIA.

Directors: Eamon Roche, Stephen Metzger, Jerome Boryca, Thomas Frechette, Jason Hickey, and Marilyn Gillon.
ServicesArchitecture, Building Services/MEP Engineering, Graphics, Interior Design, Structural Engineering, Civil Engineering, Sustainable Design and Urban Design & Planning
Number of employees
50
Websitewww.krjda.com

Roche Dinkeloo, otherwise known as Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates LLC (KRJDA), is an architectural firm based in Hamden, Connecticut founded in 1966. In 2020, it relocated to New Haven, Connecticut, and took the name Roche Modern.

About[edit]

The principal designers were 1982 Pritzker Prize laureate Kevin Roche (June 1922 – 2019),[1] with John Dinkeloo—a graduate of the University of Michigan—as the expert in construction and technology. After Roche's death, the firm relaunched in 2020 as Roche Modern under director Jerry Boryca and managing director Eamon Roche.[2] The firm is now based out of New Haven, CT.

Roche and Dinkeloo both previously worked with Eero Saarinen. Almost all buildings built by Roche are with this firm, and they exhibit his particular architecture and aesthetic, although it has changed wildly throughout the past 40 years. Earlier buildings were characterized by massive facades and experimentation with exposed steel and concrete, while more recent buildings emphasize a clean, glassy look suggesting futuristic and green architecture. The firm also built in postmodern and historicist styles during the early 1990s.

According to the company website:

KRJDA is engaged in major projects throughout the United States, Europe and Asia and provides complete master planning, programming, architectural design, interior design, working drawings, specification and construction administration services. The firm has designed a variety of institutional and corporate projects including 38 corporate headquarters, three hotel/apartment buildings, eight museums, numerous research facilities, theaters, schools, factories, performing arts centers, houses and the Central Park Zoo in New York. For the past 42 years, he has been the architect for the master plan and expansion of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, designing all of its new wings and installing many of its collections.

The firm received the American Institute of Architects 1974 Architectural Firm Award and in 1995 the firm was the recipient of the American Institute of Architect's 25-Year Award for the Ford Foundation Headquarters in New York City. In 1982, Kevin Roche received the Pritzker Prize[3] and in 1993, he received the AIA Gold Medal. In 2015 Kevin Roche received the George M. White Award from the American Architectural Foundation.

Kevin Roche has been referred to as the "first [architect] to see architecture and nature as one."[4]

The Head Office for Bouygues SA Holding company received the "Haute Qualité Environnementale (HQE)" which is the highest certification for environmental quality in building design in France.
Headquarters for Santander Central Hispano located in Madrid, Spain.
The continuous glass wall at Lucent Technologies in Nuremberg, Germany wraps around the complex to create a unified street facade.
The Ford Foundation Center for Social Justice

Projects[edit]

KRJDA has completed over 200 projects in the US and internationally. These include 8 museums, 38 institutional and corporate headquarters, 7 research laboratories, conference and performing arts centers, theaters, and campus buildings for 6 separate universities. KRJDA maintains their office in Hamden, Connecticut.

Film[edit]

A feature documentary about Kevin Roche and his work, called Kevin Roche: The Quiet Architect was released in 2017. It is directed by Irish filmmaker (ex-architecture student) Mark Noonan whose 2015 debut feature You're Ugly Too starred Aidan Gillen and was met with critical acclaim.

Notable buildings[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Goldberger, Paul (2019-03-03). "Kevin Roche, Architect Who Melded Bold With Elegant, Dies at 96 (Published 2019)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-08.
  2. ^ "Firm". Roche Modern. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  3. ^ "Kevin Roche | The Pritzker Architecture Prize". www.pritzkerprize.com. Retrieved 2021-01-08.
  4. ^ Pelkonen, Eeva-Lissa. Kevin Roche: Architecture As Environment. New Haven: Yale University Press. 2011.
  5. ^ "The Convention Centre Dublin – Dublin Docklands". www.ddda.ie. Archived from the original on 2011-11-27.
  6. ^ "Home". capitolcrossingdc.com.

External links[edit]