Craig Scott is a principal of IwamotoScott Architecture, formed in 1998 with Lisa Iwamoto and located in San Francisco. IwamotoScott's recent projects include Jellyfish House, a theoretical house design that incorporates emerging material and digital technologies; mOcean, a motion-capture–based installation for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's 2004 CX summer event; IN-OUT Curtain, a screen prototype; 2:1 House in Berkeley; and Fog House in Sausalito, California.
IwamotoScott has received numerous awards and honors, including the runner-up award in Metropolis magazine's 2006 Next Generation competition for the IN-OUT Curtain project; a Progressive Architecture Award citation for 2:1 House; the California Council of the AIA Emerging Talent Award; a Young Architects award from the Architectural League of New York; I.D. magazine design awards for mOcean and the Faculty Resource Room; first prize (with Robert Levit) in the Flemington Jewish Community Center competition; second prize in the House: Case Study Cleveland invited design competition; second prize in the Bagley Avenue Pedestrian Bridge competition; and AIA awards from the San Francisco, Boston, and New Jersey chapters. SFMOMA has acquired the Fog House project drawings for its permanent collection. Prior to founding IwamotoScott, Craig received a Progressive Architecture Award citation for his national design competition–winning scheme for a prototypical Head Start facility.
IwamotoScott's work has been published in numerous journals, including Architecture, Architectural Record, Dwell, Wallpaper, SPACE, Egg, Surface, Competitions, the New York Times, I.D., the San Francisco Chronicle, California Home & Design, the Journal of Architectural Education, and Dimensions. Their work has also appeared in the books Open House: Architecture and Technology for Intelligent Living; Entry Paradise; Transmaterial; Next Generation Architecture: Folds, Blobs and Boxes; Young Architects 4: Material Practice; and All American: Innovation in American Architecture.
Craig has continuously maintained a teaching career in addition to his work with IwamotoScott. He has taught at Harvard University, the University of Sydney, the University of Michigan, and Yale University.
Associate Professor, Architecture.
BArch, Syracuse University; MArch, Harvard University.
Website: www.iwamotoscott.com
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