Konstantinos Chatzaras is a New York based architect and writer, focused on the contemporary multiplicity of the architectural and urban form seen as a plural whole.
Konstantinos holds his Master of Architecture degree with commendation from Harvard University's Graduate School of Design, and his Bachelor of Architecture from University of Patras and the Université libre de Bruxelles where he graduated with distinction. His work has been exhibited at Harvard's Druker Design Gallery and published on he Graduate School of Design's Platform 10 and website. His texts have been featured on Masks the Journal, Scroope Cambridge Architecture Journal and Archinect.
A House By the Park; A Look at the Frick Collection, Thu, Feb 7 '19
Callouts is a review series in praise of architecture, art, and the city. Contrary to the common use of the modal verb “to call out” which emphasizes negative criticism, “Callouts” here draw from the architectural drawing tradition. Callouts in architecture establish a closer look towards ...
An American Palazzo in Greenwich Village; The Headquarters of the National Maritime Union by Albert C. Ledner, Wed, Dec 26 '18
Callouts is a review series in praise of architecture, art, and the city. Contrary to the common use of the modal verb “to call out” which emphasizes negative criticism, “Callouts” here draw from the architectural drawing tradition. Callouts in architecture establish a closer look towards ...
The Building, The Hill & The Monument; The Stavros Niarchos Cultural Centre by Renzo Piano, Wed, Nov 28 '18
Callouts is a review series in praise of architecture, art, and the city. Contrary to the common use of the modal verb “to call out” which emphasizes negative criticism, “Callouts” here draw from the architectural drawing tradition. Callouts in architecture establish a closer look towards ...
Cross-Talk #6: Konstantinos Chatzaras on East vs West, Fri, Jul 13 '18
The role of Archinect’s new series Cross-Talk is to bring forward the positive aspects of the polemic and allow for the resulting conflict to bring to life an otherwise still and comfortable climate of creativity—if there can be one. Cross-Talk attempts—if to only ...