Peter_Pennoyer

Peter Pennoyer

Peter Pennoyer

American architect


Peter Morgan Pennoyer FAIA (born on February 19, 1957) is an American architect and the principal of Peter Pennoyer Architects, an architecture firm based in New York City[1] and with an office in Miami.[2] Pennoyer, his four partners and his forty associates have an international practice in traditional and classical architecture, or New Classical Architecture. Many of the firm's institutional and commercial projects involve historic buildings,[3] and the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art has stated that the firm's strength is in "deftly fusing history and creative invention into timeless contemporary designs."[4]

Quick Facts Born, Nationality ...

The firm's projects have been featured in publications such as The New York Times,[5] Architectural Digest,[6] The Wall Street Journal,[7] Elle Decor,[8]House & Garden and Galerie Magazine.[9]

In October 2010, the Vendome Press published Peter Pennoyer Architects: Apartments, Townhouses, Country Houses,[10] which featured twenty of the firm's projects,[11] and in 2016, Vendome published A House in the Country,[12] which chronicled the process used by Pennoyer and his wife, interior designer Katie Ridder, to design their own house and garden in Millbrook, New York.[13] In 2021, the Vendome Press published Rowdy Meadow: House, Land, Art,[14] which focuses on a new Czech-cubist-inspired house set in an extensive sculpture park in Ohio,[15] and in 2023, the Vendome Press published Peter Pennoyer Architects: City, Country,[16] which illustrates the firm's latest apartments, townhouses, and country houses, with interiors by leading designers.[17]

Early life and education

Peter Pennoyer was born on February 19, 1957, in New York City, the son of Victoria (née Parsons) Pennoyer (1928-2013),[18] and Robert Morgan Pennoyer (born 1925).[19][20] His father was a partner at Patterson Belknap, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and a former Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs.[21][22] Pennoyer graduated from St. Bernard's School in New York City and St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire,[23] received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Columbia College in 1981, and a Masters of Architecture degree from Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation in 1984.[24] He is the youngest of four and his older siblings are Russell Pennoyer, Christina Lee Pennoyer, and Dr. Tracy Pennoyer (the wife of John Auchincloss, a son of author Louis Auchincloss).[25]

Pennoyer is the grandson of Frances (née Morgan) Pennoyer,[26][27] and the lawyer Paul Geddes Pennoyer;[28] a great-grandson of J.P. Morgan Jr.; and a great-great grandson of J.P. Morgan.[29][30] Pennoyer's maternal grandfather, James R. Parsons, was a partner in Chubb & Son, and his great-grandfather Hendon Chubb was a founding partner of Chubb & Son.[23]

Career

Townhouse on New York's Upper East Side.

While in graduate school from 1981 to 1983, Pennoyer worked as a designer in the Manhattan office of his Columbia professor, Robert A. M. Stern. He established his own practice in 1984, where he was a principal in the firm Pennoyer Turino Architects P. C. until 1990, after which he formed Peter Pennoyer Architects.[31] One of his earliest projects was a retreat in the Catskill Mountains for his sister's father-in-law, Louis Auchincloss.[24]

Pennoyer is a trustee of The Morgan Library & Museum,[32] and president of the Whiting Foundation,[33] which sponsors the Whiting Awards, a literary awards program. He is a National Peer Reviewer of the U.S. General Services Administration, Washington D.C., and a lifetime member of the Society of Architectural Historians. He was chairman of the board of The Institute of Classical Architecture & Art from 2009 to 2013.

From 2011-2018, Pennoyer was a adjunct professor in the Department of Art History: Department of Urban Design and Architecture Studies at New York University.[34]

Published works

Pennoyer and historian Anne Walker have co-authored five monographs of American architectural history:[35] The Architecture of Delano & Aldrich;[36] The Architecture of Warren & Wetmore;[37] The Architecture of Grosvenor Atterbury;[38] New York Transformed: The Architecture of Cross & Cross;[39] and Harrie T. Lindeberg and the American Country House.[40] He and Walker also wrote the introduction to a reprint of Frank M. Snyder's Building Details.[41]

Recognition

The Institute for Classical Architecture & Art (ICAA) gave Pennoyer's firm its Stanford White Award for the design of a house in Dutchess County, New York (2012),[42] its Stanford White Award, for the design of a new apartment building on Manhattan's Upper East Side and for a new house in Maine (2016),[43] its Bulfinch Award (to Preserve and Advance the Classical Tradition in New England) for its design of a new classical house in Massachusetts (2017).[44]

In 2017, the College of Charleston awarded Pennoyer its Albert Simons Medal of Excellence.[45] In 2017, the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art gave the firm the Arthur Ross Award for architecture.[46] Peter Pennoyer received the Pillar of New York Award from the Preservation League of New York State in 2019.[47] In 2024, The University of Notre Dame honored Pennoyer with the Richard R. Driehaus Prize, an annual award established in 2003 celebrating “a living architect whose work embodies the highest ideals of traditional and classical architecture in contemporary society, and creates a positive cultural, environmental, and artistic impact.” [48]

Peter Pennoyer Architects has been onArchitectural Digest's AD100 List,[49] a listing of outstanding talent in architecture and interior design since 2012. The firm is included in New York Spaces Top 50 Designers List,[50] and in Ocean Home magazine's Top 50 Coastal Architects list.[51]

Pennoyer was elected to the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects in 2014,[52] and to the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen in 2016.[53]

Representative projects

Peter Pennoyer Architects' projects include the following:

Personal life

In 1988, Pennoyer married Katherine Lee "Katie" Ridder,[23] the daughter of Constance Ridder, a lawyer, and Paul Anthony Ridder, a director of Knight Ridder, and the granddaughter of Bernard Ridder, the former chairman of Knight Ridder.[62] They have three children: Jane, Anthony, and Virginia, and reside in New York City on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.


References

  1. "Home Page". 22 January 2015.
  2. "PPAPC home page". Retrieved 2009-11-10.
  3. Gray, Christopher (2013-04-18). "Buildings That Lie About Their Age". The New York Times.
  4. Gardner, Ralph Jr. (22 May 2014). "Raising and Preserving". Wall Street Journal via www.wsj.com.
  5. Walker, Anne; Stern, Robert A. M. (1 October 2010). Peter Pennoyer Architects: Apartments, Townhouses, Country Houses. Vendome Press. ISBN 978-0-86565-268-2.
  6. Johnson, Sara (October 25, 2016). "Q+A: Architect Peter Pennoyer on Designing His Carved, Beautifully Detailed Box". Architect Magazine. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  7. Walker, Anne; Pennoyer, Peter (1 October 2021). Rowdy Meadow: House, Land, Art. Vendome Press. ISBN 978-0-86565-397-9.
  8. Walker, Anne; Pennoyer, Peter (1 October 2023). Peter Pennoyer Architects: City, Country. Vendome Press. ISBN 978-0-86565-414-3.
  9. "PENNOYER, VICTORIA PARSONS". The New York Times. October 3, 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  10. Primus VI (9 August 2016). "Soldiers, When Young". Harvard Magazine. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  11. "Biography | Robert M. Pennoyer". www.pbwt.com. Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  12. Burnham, Sophy (8 December 1969). "The Manhattan Arrangement of Art and Money". New York. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  13. Loos, Ted (January 19, 2015). "A Classical Act". 1stdibs Introspective. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  14. "Frances Pennoyer, 92, J. P. Morgan's Child". The New York Times. March 12, 1989. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  15. Schaer, Sidney C. (March 14, 1989). "Morgan Daughter Dies; Last surviving child was 92". Newsday. Retrieved 2009-10-30. Mrs. Pennoyer, the mother of six, a grandmother of 28 and a great-grandmother of 31, lived in the English-Norman styled home on an estate called "Round Bush" in Locust Valley. Born into a family whose name was synonymous with international banking, immense wealth and philanthropy, she nevertheless lived a private life...
  16. "Obituary: Jessie Snyder". Greenwich Sentinel. May 21, 2018. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  17. Gray, Christopher (April 18, 2013). "Buildings That Lie About Their Age". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  18. "Board of Trustees". 1 February 2015.
  19. "People". www.whiting.org.
  20. P. Pennoyer; A. Walker (2014). New York Transformed: The Architecture of Cross & Cross. The Monacelli Press.
  21. "Home - Albert Simons Medal of Excellence". Albert Simons Medal of Excellence.
  22. "Top 50 - Peter Pennoyer Architects (New York Spaces)". www.newyorkspaces.com. 25 March 2020.
  23. Abkowitz, Alyssa (13 March 2014). "A Chinese City's Parisian Love Affair". Wall Street Journal via www.wsj.com.
  24. "Digging Deep". 4 September 2014.
  25. Searcey, Dionne (30 December 2020). "Let There be Light, and Art, in the Moynihan Train Hall". The New York Times.
  26. "Katie Ridder, Editor, Is Wed". The New York Times. September 25, 1988. Retrieved 10 November 2018.

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