Florian Idenburg

Florian Idenburg (born 1975 in Haarlem, Netherlands) is a Dutch architect, co-founder of the New York-based design firm SO-IL. He studied architecture at Delft University of Technology, earning a Master of Science in Architectural Engineering in 1999. Early in his career (2000-2007), he worked at the acclaimed Japanese firm SANAA, where he was involved in projects such as the Glass Pavilion at the Toledo Museum of Art and the New Museum in New York.
In 2008 he founded SO-IL together with Jing Liu. Their practice spans architecture, installations, exhibition design, and furniture, with a strong focus on cultural and institutional projects. Idenburg also has a significant academic role: he is a Professor of the Practice at Cornell University's College of Architecture, Art, and Planning. Over the years he has taught at Harvard, MIT, Columbia, and Princeton. His work is known for combining theoretical rigour with inventive form and material, and he has been recognized with awards including the Charlotte Köhler Prize.
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