Sarah Williams Goldhagen

Author, Architecture Critic

  • Home
  • About
  • Books
  • Other Writing
    • Criticism
    • History
    • ARCHITECTURE
    • Landscape
    • THEORY
    • URBAN DESIGN/ CITY PLANNING
  • Media
  • News & Reviews
  • Appearances
  • Contact

November 29, 2016 By Sarah Goldhagen

Reason to be Cheerful

The New Republic
Jean Nouvel
The Pritzker Architecture Prize is commonly described as “the Nobel Prize of architecture.” It was indeed modeled on the Nobel, and its winners, like Nobel laureates, receive a bronze medal and a cash award. Yet the imputed equivalence between the two prizes is misleading. Alfred Nobel created his prize to reward specific and identifiable accomplishments that advance knowledge or create…

Read More

Filed Under: ARCHITECTURE

Categories

  • ARCHITECTURE (20)
  • Criticism (24)
  • History (6)
  • Landscape (1)
  • THEORY (1)
  • Uncategorized (1)
  • URBAN DESIGN/ CITY PLANNING (1)

Recent Posts

Excerpts from ‘Welcome to Your World: How the Built Environment Shapes Our Lives’

URBAN PASTORALS

From the Stacks: Santiago Calatrava’s Overrated Architecture

Stopped Making Sense

Making Waves

American Collapse

When Did Architecture’s Top Prize Become So Predictable and Boring?

How Steve Jobs Turned Design Into a Necessity

The Beauty and Inhumanity of Oscar Niemeyer’s Architecture

Architecture is More Than Just Buildings: In Remembrance of Ada Louise Huxtable

Shigeru Ban: Winner of the 2014 Pritzker Architecture Prize

Frank Lloyd Wright Was a Genius at Building Houses, But His Ideas for Cities Were Terrible

Place of Grace

Reason to be Cheerful

Sarah Williams Goldhagen on Architecture: Extra-Large

FOLLOW SARAH:

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 Sarah Williams Goldhagen · Site Design: Ilsa Brink