Denise Scott Brown

NA 2011

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Denise Scott Brown
Denise Scott Brown
Denise Scott Brown
b. 1931
Denise Scott Brown is an architect, urban planner, author, and educator — and one of the most innovative thinkers of her generation. She has opened the field of mainstream modernist architecture to global experiences and issues previously overlooked in the discipline. Her practice and writing has embraced such disparate ideas as pluralism and multiculturalism, social justice and activism, Pop Art, popular culture, economics, computer theory, and many other contemporary issues impacting architecture and urbanism today.

Born in Zambia and raised in Johannesburg, Scott Brown received master’s degrees in city planning and architecture from the University of Pennsylvania and spent five years on its faculty. She has also taught at UC Berkeley, UCLA, Yale, Harvard, and Princeton, and has lectured and advised worldwide on architecture, urbanism, and education.

At Penn, Scott Brown began her professional association with Robert Venturi, who served on the faculty with her and, since 1967, has been her partner at the Philadelphia firm Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates, where the emphasis is on collaboration, shared achievement, and the integral role of staff and associates.

As principal-in-charge for urban planning, urban design, and campus planning, Scott Brown’s work has included urban planning for South Street in Philadelphia, Miami Beach, and Memphis, Tennessee; programming for the National Museum of the American Indian; and, a plan for the Bouregreg Valley in Morocco.

She has made a particularly significant contribution to the experience of American higher learning, providing campus plans for numerous universities; she has also recently written on urban planning and design for the World Trade Center site and New Orleans.

Scott Brown’s contributions have been recognized with innumerable awards and honorary degrees, and she has been widely published in professional journals and the architectural press.