Top 19 Quotes & Sayings by Greg Lynn

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American architect Greg Lynn.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Greg Lynn

Greg Lynn is an American architect, founder and owner of the Greg Lynn FORM office and a professor at the UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture. He is CEO and co-founder of the Boston based robotics company Piaggio Fast Forward. He won a Golden Lion at the 2008 Venice Biennale of Architecture. In 2010 Lynn was named a fellow by United States Artists. He is a member of the board of trustees of the Canadian Centre for Architecture.

A very big percentage of small-scale construction is plastic. But it's some horrible beige plastic made to look like wood.
As sustainability becomes more and more of a concern, we're going to see more plastics.
Without a computer, every point on a structure has to be calculated with reference to everything else. But by using a PC, I can create complex curves that don't have radii or centers.
It's incredibly exciting to know people are using and living with the things I create. — © Greg Lynn
It's incredibly exciting to know people are using and living with the things I create.
It's most satisfying to have an effect on the public realm - deep down I think it's what every architect wants to do.
It turns out it's not rocket science to design a sacred space.
Plastics, as a material, are very nasty, but as an alternative to, let's say, a brick, which seems really natural, they start to look pretty good. They're very low energy to produce, very lightweight to transport and construct. That's why they're so popular.
The clothes I like are not necessarily tailored.
What's interesting about architects is, we always have tried to justify beauty by looking to nature, and arguably, beautiful architecture has always been looking at a model of nature.
To go back to architecture, what's organic about architecture as a field, unlike product design, is this whole issue of holism and of monumentality is really our realm. Like, we have to design things which are coherent as a single object, but also break down into small rooms and have an identity of both the big scale and the small scale.
I really like the pop culture materials of everyday life, but used in some way that elevates them to something you notice and care about.
By supporting all the links in the building chain and giving them an easy, intuitive tool for sharing model-based project information, GTeam enhances workflows and improves communication from design through to fabrication and assembly.
When my kids were toddlers, they had all these rotomolded plastic things. My life became surrounded by big, hollow plastic toys - from the scale of playhouses down to rocking horses, and everything in between - which we would then take to the secondhand store. But we'd get sentimentally attached and hate to see them go.
With everything that I design, from a church to a plate to skyscraper to a spoon. I am always thinking about voluptuous volumes and spaces.
Before computers, you'd start designing using shapes of cubes. Now I can start with something like a handkerchief, an object that doesn't have strong inside and outside boundaries or much closed volume.
I always try to think in curves.
To go back to architecture, whats organic about architecture as a field, unlike product design, is this whole issue of holism and of monumentality is really our realm. Like, we have to design things which are coherent as a single object, but also break down into small rooms and have an identity of both the big scale and the small scale.
A very big percentage of small-scale construction is plastic. But its some horrible beige plastic made to look like wood.
It's tens of millions of calculations just to design one connection between a piece of structural steel and another piece of structural steel. — © Greg Lynn
It's tens of millions of calculations just to design one connection between a piece of structural steel and another piece of structural steel.
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