Page 200 - Libro Max Cetto
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(with Nicholas Temple and Andrzej Piotrowski) of The Routledge Handbook of the Recep-
tion of Classical Architecture (Routledge, 2019) and coauthor (with Miquel Adrià) of the
book Juan Sordo Madaleno 1916-1985 (Arquine 2013). His work has been published in Ar-
quine and Bitácora Arquitectura (Mexico), The Journal of Architectural Education (USA), On-
Site Review (Canada) and Arkitekten (Denmark). He has lectured at the University of
Lincoln, the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), the University of Penn-
sylvania, the Universidad Veracruzana, Pennsylvania State University and Silpakorn Uni-
versity in Bangkok.
Felipe Leal
Is an UNAM architect and the dean of its School of Architecture from 1997 to 2005, an
academic with forty years of practice and a guest professor at universities in Latin America,
North America and Europe. He is famed for the house-studios he designed and built for
Vicente Rojo, Gabriel García Márquez, Juan Villoro and Angeles Mastretta, as well as the
headquarters of the Mexican Academy of Sciences and the campus of the UNAM’s Morelia
campus. In 2007, he coordinated the bid for the central campus of University City to be
declared an UNESCO World Heritage Site. He founded the Mexico City Public Space Au-
thority in 2008, where he developed the pedestrian corridor on Calle Madero, the Plaza de
la República, the Monument to the Revolution and the renovation of the Alameda Central.
For 18 years, he conducted the radio program Architecture in Space and Time at Radio
UNAM. He was a National System of Art Creators (Fonca) Fellow from 2005 to 2008. In
2019, He received the Art-Architecture Award from the Mexico City Congress. He is a
Member Emeritus of the National Academy of Architecture, member and president of the
Mexican Culture Seminar and has been a member of the Colegio Nacional since 2021.
Salvador Lizárraga Sánchez
Is a professor and editor specialized in modern Mexican architecture. He studied architec-
ture at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and has an MA in the His-
tory of Art, Architecture and Urban Planning from the Polytechnic University of Catalonia,
Barcelona, where he is currently a PhD candidate in the theory and history of architec-
ture. He currently leads the Laboratorio Editorial de Arquitectura and led the publishing
department of the UNAM’s School of Architecture from 2012 to 2107, a period during
which the school’s books and journals received awards from domestic and international
institutions, such as the Philip Johnson Award given out by the Society of Architectural
Historians, as well as awards and honorable mentions from the Ibero-American Archi-
tecture and Urbanism Biennale, the Quito Biennale and the Mexico City Architecture
Biennale, among others. He is the coeditor, with Enrique X. de Anda, of The Architectonic
Culture of Mexican Modernity (UNAM, 2007) and, with Cristina López Uribe, of Living CU:
60 Years (UNAM, 2014). He has been an advisor for architecture exhibitions at the University
Museum of Art and Science and is currently a professor of the history of architecture at the
UNAM.
Cristina López Uribe
Is an architectural historian who specializes in twentieth-century Mexican architecture. She
studied architecture at the National Autonomous University of México (UNAM) and has an
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