Ángela García de Paredes | |
Birth Name: | Ángela García de Paredes Falla |
Birth Place: | Madrid, Spain |
Occupation: | Architect |
Notable Works: | Teatro Valle-Inclán |
Mother: | María Isabel de Falla |
Alma Mater: | Technical University of Madrid |
Ángela García de Paredes Falla (born 1958) is a Spanish architect. She founded the Paredes Pedrosa studio together with Ignacio García Pedrosa.
De Paredes was born in Madrid in 1958. She is the daughter of architect and María Isabel de Falla (the daughter of architect Germán de Falla and sister of composer Manuel de Falla).[1]
De Paredes earned a licentiate as an architect from the Superior Technical School of Architecture of Madrid (ETSAM) in 1983,[2] and an Architecture PhD from the Technical University of Madrid in 2015 with the thesis La arquitectura de José M. García de Paredes, ideario de una obra (The Architecture of José M. García de Paredes, the Ideology of a Work).[3]
Together with architect Ignacio García Pedrosa, De Paredes founded the Paredes Pedrosa studio in 1990. They combine the free practice of the profession with teaching work at the universities of Granada, Barcelona, and Navarra. They are professors of ETSAM's Department of Architectural Projects.[4] They have also held critical sessions at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, ETH Zurich, the Accademia di Architettura di Mendrisio, and the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. They have been guest lecturers at the universities of São Paulo, Università Iuav di Venezia,[5] Oslo, Monterrey, Puerto Rico, and Münster, as well as the City University of New York,, the Dallas Architecture Forum, the Polytechnic University of Milan, the Technical University of Munich, the Graz University of Technology, and the Times Center of New York.[6] [7]
De Paredes took control of her father's architecture studio upon his death in 1990.
Since 2011, de Paredes has served as a member of the jury for the Architecture Awards.[8]
In 2007, Ángela García de Paredes and Ignacio García Pedrosa received the Spanish Architecture Award for the Teatro Valle-Inclán in the Lavapiés district of Madrid. In the words of the jury, it was given
In 2013, they received the Eduardo Torroja Award for Engineering and Architecture from the Eduardo Torroja Foundation and the Ministry of Development for the Villa Romana de la Olmeda in Pedrosa de la Vega. The jury cited "the way in which their audacious structural conception, typical of civil engineering, enhances the clear and resounding expression of their architecture."[11]
In 2014 they received the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts from the Ministry of Education and the Council of Ministers,[12] as well as the Luis Moreno Mansilla Award ex aequo from the for their work on the Public Library of Ceuta.[13]