Chris J. K. Williams | |
Birth Name: | Christopher J. K. Williams |
Nationality: | British |
Known For: | shell structures, gridshells, optimisation, geometry |
Notable Works: | Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, Savill Building, Multihalle Mannheim, Netherlands Maritime Museum, Gardens by the Bay |
Discipline: | Engineer |
Workplaces: | University of Bath, Chalmers University of Technology |
Christopher John Kenneth Williams is a British structural engineer and researcher who has specialised in the relationship between geometry and structural action. He works on a range of building types including thin-shell structures, gridshells and tension structures, as well as bridges and towers.
Williams worked for Ove Arup in the 1970s.[1] While at Arup, he was involved with the Mannheim Multihalle (de), a pioneering timber gridshell designed by Frei Otto (1975). He has since devoted most of his career to academia, conducting research and teaching at the University of Bath (from 1976)[2] and at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden (since 2016). While at Bath, in collaboration with Deborah Greaves, he researched the effect of wind on fabric, and he continues to work on the effect of wind on flexible structures.[3]
Some of Williams' most notable subsequent contributions include:
He has collaborated with architects and engineers including Foster + Partners, Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, Branson Coates Architecture, Shigeru Ban Architects, Wilkinson Eyre Architects, Edward Cullinan Architects, Arup, Atelier One and Buro Happold.[7]
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