Luis Barragán

Mexican Architect and Engineer

Luis Barragan Portrait

Born in Guadalajara in 1902, Luis Ramiro Barragán Morfín is regarded as the most prominent figure in modern Mexican architecture. By the time of his death in 1988, his persona and way of working had attained almost mythical status, and the interest in his oeuvre has increased ever since.

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Notable Works

Praised in the Pritzker Prize laudatio for “his commitment to architecture as a sublime act of poetic imagination”, Barragán’s architectural approach embraced the principles of Modernism while remaining deeply rooted in Mexican tradition.
Below are a few notable examples of his work.

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Luis Barragán House and Studio

Located in the west of Mexico City, the residence was built in 1948 after the Second World War. It reflects Barragán's design style during this period and remained his residence until his death in 1988. In 1994 it was converted into a museum.
The site became World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2004.

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Casa Giraldi

The last project Barragán completed before he died, Casa Gilardi is known for the huge jacaranda tree decorating its interior courtyard, and for a striking hallway with vertical apertures that bounce sunlight against brightly painted yellow walls and out into an electric blue room with an indoor pool.
It was built in 1976, within the Federal District of Mexico, in a village called Tacubaya, and remains one of the few Barragán-designed homes still in good shape and open to the public.

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