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Asymptote Architecture


Asymptote Architecture is an American architecture practice based in Long Island City, New York.

Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture founded Asymptote Architecture in 1989. The firm began by designing buildings in the United States, subsequently expanding to their international presence. One of their most famous early designs was their winning entry for the Los Angeles Westcoast Gateway Competition. An international jury of designers chose "Steel Cloud" out of more than 150 submissions, but the monument received a mixed reception from Angelenos and wasn't built because of a lack of funding. In 1992, Asymptote was invited by The New York Times to design a hypothetical building for Times Square. Asymptote designed the first large-capacity virtual reality environment for the New York Stock Exchange as well as the construction of the Advanced Floor Operations Center on the trading floor of the Wall Street facility. The project was listed in the AIA Guide to Noteworthy Architecture in New York City.

Asymptote's first project built overseas was the 1996 Universe Theatre in Aarhus, Denmark. The project was awarded the Danish building of the year award by the Architects' Association of Denmark. They also designed the HydraPier Pavilion in Haarlemmermeer, Netherlands. Asymptote built flagship stores for several retailers, including Carlos Miele and Alessi. More recently, Asymptote has constructed several skyscrapers, such as the 190 Váci Budapest Bank Commercial Towers in Budapest, Hungary, and FCD Yongsan Landmark Tower in Seoul, South Korea. The company also designs buildings for cultural institutions, shipping terminals, and residential buildings.

Critics have described Asymptote's architectural style as "futuristic." Rashid and Couture believe that the spatial form of a building is what drives its architectural meaning. The firm says that its buildings reflect certain attributes of the surrounding environment. For example, the Yas Viceroy Abu Dhabi Hotel has a fluid, curvilinear form, evoking the concept of speed, since Formula One auto races are held underneath the building. 166 Perry Street, a condominium in the West Village neighborhood of New York City, has a rippling glass façade that evokes a waterfall.


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