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Nina
Architonic ID: 20031798
SKU: M234 US
Einführungsjahr: 2012
Finish:
US superanthracite satin
Konzept
Temporally, the Nina handle follows the Denver model. Although not with the same intensity, also Nina plays with slight offsets, oblique lines and unexpected cuts. I would define it as feminine compared to Denver, which to me has a more masculine character. I named the handle after my wife, who is a close collaborator on my projects. I love using this handle for my buildings and friends’ houses. Precisely thanks to the handle projects for Olivari, my interest in interior design elements has grown. Door handles are important objects because we use them daily. Increasingly often, my architectural projects are integral ones, meaning I design everything right down to the last detail. Daniel Libeskind
Material:
Brass
Finish:
bright chrome, satin chrome, superstainlesssteel satin, superanthracite satin

United States
Studio Libeskind is an international architecture practice headquartered in New York City. The Studio is involved in designing and realizing a diverse array of urban, cultural and commercial projects internationally. The Studio has completed buildings that range from museums and concert halls to convention centers, university buildings, hotels, shopping centers and residential towers. Daniel and his partner Nina Libeskind established Studio Daniel Libeskind in Berlin, Germany, in 1989 after winning the competition to build the Jewish Museum Berlin. In February 2003, Studio Daniel Libeskind moved its headquarters from Berlin to New York City when Studio Libeskind was selected as the master planner for the World Trade Center redevelopment. Biography Daniel Libeskind Mr. Libeskind has taught and lectured at many universities worldwide. He has held such positions as the Frank O. Gehry Chair at the University of Toronto, Professor at the Hochschule für Gestaltung, Karlsruhe, Germany, the Cret Chair at the University of Pennsylvania, and the Louis Kahn Chair at Yale University. He has received numerous awards including the 2001 Hiroshima Art Prize — an award given to an artist whose work promotes international understanding and peace, never before given to an architect. Born in post-war Poland, Daniel Libeskind immigrated to America with his family becoming an American citizen in 1964. A virtuoso musician at a young age, he gave up music to study architecture. Mr. Libeskind holds a degree in Architecture from the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City and a postgraduate degree in the History and Theory of Architecture from the School of Comparative Studies at Essex University in England. Mr. Libeskind lives in New York with his wife and business partner Nina Libeskind.