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Mónica Rivera



Mónica Rivera is chair of graduate architecture and the JoAnne Stolaroff Cotsen Professor of Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the co-founder and co-director of Emiliano López Mónica Rivera Arquitectos, based in Barcelona, Spain. Their practice is internationally known for material research and carefully crafted works that understand architecture as a cultural endeavor that is deeply engaged with people and the environment. 

Rivera and Lopez’s work, which encompasses multiple scales from public housing to houses, schools to hotels, furniture, assisted residences, and urban consultancies, and has received numerous international awards. Two Cork Houses — using cross-laminated timber structure and cork cladding — and Hotel Aire de Bardenas received first awards in the Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism (2018 and 2008, respectively). The former also received the Best Architects 19 prize (Germany) and the Egurtek Wood Award (Spain), and the latter received an Ibero-American Biennial of Architecture & Urbanism first award and an AR Emerging Architecture Award, among many others. The project Social Housing for Young People in Barcelona received the prestigious FAD Award, given annually to one building in Spain and Portugal, as well as a nomination for the biannual EU Mies van der Rohe Prize for Contemporary Architecture. 

Their work has been published in El Croquis (Spain), A+U (Japan), Casabella (Italy), Domus (Italy), Detail (Germany), and The Architectural Review (London), among others, and has been exhibited in venues such as the Cité de l’Architecture & du Patrimoine in Paris (2009), the Venice Architecture Biennale (2012), and the XIV Spanish Architecture and Urbanism Biennial. A book featuring their work and essays, “Domestic Thresholds,” was published by Quart Verlag (Switzerland) in Spanish, English, and German. 

Among their ongoing projects is a nearly zero-energy, intergenerational public housing building in Mallorca, Spain — a commission won through a competition in 2021 — and a passive energy house using cross-laminated timber, near Gernika, Spain. Rivera is currently collaborating with Eric P. Mumford, the Rebecca and John Voyles Professor of Architecture, on the research Edges of Privacy: Open Access Walkways in Collective Housing, with the support of a Global Incubator Seed Grant awarded by WashU’s McDonnell International Scholars Academy in 2021 and through a seminar taught in spring 2021 and 2022.  

Rivera holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts and a Bachelor of Architecture from Rhode Island School of Design, and a Master of Architecture with distinction from Harvard University. 


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