David Chipperfield studied architecture at the Kingston School of Art and the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. He worked for Douglas Stephen, Richard Rogers and Norman Foster before founding his own practice in 1985 and establishing a design methodology that is now used across five offices in London, Berlin, Milan, Shanghai and Santiago de Compostela.
David Chipperfield is a member of the Royal Institute of British Architects and an honorary fellow of both the American Institute of Architects and the Bund Deutscher Architekten. Among the accolades he has received are the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, awarded in 2009, and a knighthood for services to architecture in the UK and Germany, awarded in 2010. He has received the RIBA Royal Gold Medal for Architecture (2011) and the Praemium Imperiale from the Japan Art Association (2013), both given in recognition of a lifetime’s work.
David Chipperfield was appointed a member of the Order of the UK’s Companions of Honour in 2021, Commander of Spain’s Orden de Isabel la Católica, and member of Germany’s Orden Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaften und Künste in 2022, for his services to architecture internationally. He received the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2023.
In addition to design work, David Chipperfield has taught and lectured at schools of architecture worldwide. In 2012 he curated the 13th International Architecture Exhibition of the Venice Biennale under the title ‘Common Ground’. He served as the mentor for architecture from 2016–17 for the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative.
In 2017 he founded Fundación RIA, a private, non-profit entity that works towards meaningful economic, environmental and cultural development in Galicia, Spain.
David Chipperfield has published numerous books and articles, including ‘On Planning – A Thought Experiment’ (2018), a publication that explores and theorises the urban qualities of contemporary urban developments. He was the 2020 guest editor of Italian design magazine Domus.
Born: 1953
Nationality: British
Elected RA: 11 December 2007
Gender: Male
Visit Sir David Chipperfield RA (b. 1953)'s website
Preferred media: Architecture
David Chipperfield RA
David Chipperfield RA transformed the Royal Academy in 2018, in time for its 250th anniversary, by uniting the buildings on Piccadilly and Burlington Gardens and creating new spaces for exhibitions and debate, including a 260-capacity lecture theatre.
After more than 60 years as a ruin, due to bomb damage during the war, Berlin’s Neues Museum was reopened in 2009 following a painstaking restoration project. The 19th-century façade and interiors were repaired and recreated, with scars of war incorporated into the design rather than being removed.
Named after the Wakefield-born sculptor Barbara Hepworth, whose works help comprise its collection, this art gallery on the banks of the River Calder is clad in pigmented concrete and uses the water’s flow to control its interior temperature.
Dramatically set on the seafront, this gallery makes the most of what brought painter J.M.W. Turner RA to the Kent coastal town of Margate: sublime light and spectacular views of the sea. Pitched roofs provide natural light to galleries, in a structure designed to withstand the extreme conditions of the seafront such as high winds and waves.
Presenting one of the largest private collections of contemporary art in Latin America, this multi-storey Mexico City museum is notable for its rhythmic geometry, light-filled loggia and travertine façade, reminiscent of indigenous Mexican sculpture.
In March David Chipperfield Architects was selected to redesign the modern and contemporary art wing of this august New York institution, with plans that greatly increase gallery space for the collection and double the size of the Met’s roof garden (pictured here with a display of work by Jeff Koons).