| Pelli Clark Pelli Architects & Sustainable design |
Cesar Pelli In 1991, the AIA selected Mr. Pelli as one of the 10 most influential living American architects. Cesar Pelli has received over 100 awards for design excellence and is the only architect to receive a Connecticut State Arts Award.
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| Fred Clarke One of the founding members of Pelli Clarke Pelli, Fred Clarke is Collaborating Design Principal in the studio. In 1977, he joined Mr. Pelli in establishing the firm in New Haven, Connecticut. |
Rafael Pelli first joined Pelli Clarke Pelli from 1979 to 1981; in 1989, he rejoined the firm. Mr. Pelli is the Principal of the firm’s New York office which was established in the summer of 2000.
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| One of the best architects of our century Cesar Pelli and his partners architects Fred Clarke and Rafael Pelli (son) are the winners of the 2 biggest projects in the Country. As the environmental impact of buildings becomes more apparent, the field called sustainable design is leading the way. Sustainable design is the foundation for these incredible projects. |
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CityCenter in Las Vegas. The iconic 60-story, 4,000-room hotel /casino will become the focal point of the Las Vegas skyline. At the heart of CityCenter, the retail and entertainment district by Studio Daniel Libeskind will feature high-end retailers, fashionable clubs, gourmet restaurants, galleries and more under a crystalline canopy of unprecedented brilliance. For the interior architecture, David Rockwell and Rockwell Group will create an experiential environment to complement the overall city scene. The designers actually hope to receive a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification for this project.
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MGM Mirage
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A design scheme for Project CityCenter in Las Vegas
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The most expensive private project ever, the MGM Mirage City Center is set to transform the strip and Las Vegas.
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Transbay Transit Center in San Francisco. The terminal is part of a $983 million project that also includes demolition of the current terminal and running a temporary terminal. Transbay officials hope to open the new terminal by 2014.
Transbay Transit Center aspires to become one of San Francisco’s great civic places. Its architecture is open, full of light and clean air, and environmentally sustainable - a futuristic quarter-mile-long structure that would extend above First and Fremont streets and would be topped by a 5.4-acre park.
transforming the roof of the Transit Center into a public park. The park also actively improves the environment around the Transit Center, absorbing pollution from bus exhaust, treating and recycling water, and providing a habitat for local wildlife. Sustainability is at the heart of our proposal.
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Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects
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A design scheme for Project Transbay Transit Center in San Francisco
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Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects design for the new Transbay Transit Center slated to start building in 2009 and to finish by 2014.
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