Nigel Coates (architect)


Nigel Coates is an English architect. He grew up in the town of Malvern, Worcestershire and was educated at Hanley Castle Grammar School before studying at the University of Nottingham and the Architectural Association. In 1985 he formed Branson Coates Architecture with Doug Branson before establishing his own studio of architecture and design in 2006. In 2011 he was made Emeritus Professor at the Royal College of Art and is currently Chair of the Academic Court at the London School of Architecture. Items of his work held in museum collections including the Victoria & Albert Museum London, FRAC Orléans, and the Museum for Architectural Drawing Berlin, including drawings of noteworthy projects such as the House for Derek Jarman and the Tokyo Wall.

Narrative Architecture

He is the primary instigator of the NATO movement.

Built work

Coates' first built commissions came from Japan and were followed by projects across the UK. Notable projects include Caffè Bongo, Noah’s Ark, the Wall and the Art Silo, all in Japan, and in Britain, the Geffrye Museum extension, Oyster House, Powerhouse::uk, and the National Centre for Popular Music in Sheffield. An original drawing and model of the Wall are held in the permanent collection of the V&A Museum as examples of important contributions to Postmodern architecture.

Interiors and exhibitions

Coates has been responsible for many interior and exhibition designs in the UK and Europe, including several shops for fashion designer Katharine Hamnett, the Living Bridges exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts, the British Pavilion at Expo '98 in Lisbon, the Body Zone at London's Millennium Dome, the Jigsaw flagship store on Knightsbridge, Ecstacity in the British Pavilion at the 2000 Venice Architecture Biennale, Mixtacity at Tate Modern in 2007, his Hypnerotosphere installation at the 2008 Venice Architecture Biennale, the 2009 refurbishment of Middle and Over Wallop restaurants at Glyndebourne Opera House and the installation 'Picaresque', part of the 2012 exhibition Kama: Sesso e Design at the Triennale di Milano.

Academic career

He was Unit Master at the Architectural Association from 1978 to 1988. From 1995 to 2011 he was Professor and Head of the Department of Architecture at the Royal College of Art and in 2011 was made Emeritus Professor. In 2012 Nigel Coates was awarded the RIBA Annie Spink Award in recognition of an outstanding contribution to architectural education. He is Chair of the Academic Court at the London School of Architecture.

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