About the patron

About

Stefan Kuryłowicz  was an architect and professor, one of the most influential artists in the history of Polish architecture, the creator and co-creator of many prestigious buildings recognised in domestic and foreign competitions. He was born 26 March 1949 in Warsaw, in a family of architects; both his father Witold and his mother Janina were architects. Kuryłowicz followed in their footsteps, graduating from the Architecture Faculty of Warsaw University of Technology. He remained affiliated with this school for many years. In his educational and design work, Kuryłowicz was guided by the conviction that the profession of architect is a profession of public trust, and thus it carries the obligation to expose one’s art to public criticism. His ideas and the buildings based on them, as well as his theoretical work, changed the face of post-communist Warsaw and had a great influence on future generations of architects. The Kuryłowicz & Associates Studio he created boldly combined creative architectural art with meeting business and market demands. In his private life, Kuryłowicz was the husband and co-worker of architect Ewa Kuryłowicz; the father of two sons, Michał and Marek; the twin brother of Alina and the older brother of Justyna. He was also a sports enthusiast, a marathon runner, sailor, skier, airplane pilot, member of the Warsaw Aero Club and also a passionate traveller. He was a man full of sympathy and sincere openness to the people with whom and for whom he worked.

  • 1949
    Kuryłowicz was born 26 March 1949 in Warsaw, where both of his parents, Witold and Alina, were still students at the Architecture Faculty of Warsaw University of Technology.
  • 1972
    Initially he had thought about studying at the University of Physical Education. He was convinced to change his plans by a letter from his father, who had emigrated. Kuryłowicz himself recalled the letter this way: “Over five pages, (my father) explained what people with architecture degrees do. The next five messages was about the misfortunes of young people who didn’t study architecture. The last half page was taken up by threats. He wrote that he would disinherit me – till today, I don’t know from what. So I studied architecture.” Following in the footsteps of this parents, in 1972 he was awarded a degree from the Architecture Faculty of Warsaw University of Technology. That same year he also began working there.
  • 1974
    The beginning of the young architecture graduate’s career was related to theatre and opera buildings. The first design competitions he won with a team of friends included those of the Baltic Opera House in Gdańsk (1974), the Wrocław Philharmonic (1975), the Damascus Opera (2nd prize, 1979). This was also the subject of Kuryłowicz’s 1987 doctoral dissertation, titled “Wpływ uwarunkowań zewnętrznych na kształt przestrzenny zespołów teatralnych” (The influence of external conditions on the shape of theatre troupes’ spaces). But his first implemented project was a sausage stand in Warsaw’s Kępa Potocka neighbourhood.
  • 1977
    From 1977 to 1999, Kuryłowicz worked in the Industrial and Large-Space Architecture Design Studio in the Architecture Faculty of Warsaw University of Technology, and in 1999 he became its director. This studio was shaped by its founder, Professor Jerzy Hryniewiecki, and continued by Prof. Maciej Gintowt. While Kuryłowicz decided to found his own professional practice, he never left his work at his alma mater, and took an enthusiastic approach to the education of young architects. He supervised more than 100 diploma projects, of which many won awards in domestic and international competitions, and in 2009 he had the honour of being recorded in the Golden Book of Warsaw University of Technology Graduates.
  • 1983

    In 1983, Kuryłowicz founded the Kuryłowicz Architecture Studio (APA Kuryłowicz), operating as part of the Architecture Studios State Enterprise), and seven years later in 1990 he changed it into the Kuryłowicz & Associates Architecture Studio. As the chief designer and president of this studio, he was the co-creator of many prestigious buildings that won awards in domestic and foreign competitions. The most significant of these are the VitkAc shopping centre in Warsaw; the Warsaw office buildings Prosta Tower, Focus Filtrowa, Wolf Nullo and Królewska; the headquarters of LOT Polish Airlines, Fuji Film Poland, Emi Pomaton, Avon and Reprograf; the industrial buildings Avon Cosmetics in Garwolin, Arcon ISC in Warsaw and Ostervijg in Nieporęt. He was also the designer of buildings and residential developments including Eko Park and Marina Mokotów in Warsaw; hotels including the Gdańsk Hilton, the Hilton Doubletree in Łódź, Courtyard by Marriott at Chopin airport in Warsaw and churches in Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, the Widzew housing estate in Łódź, Grodzisk Mazowiecki and the Wierzbno estate in Warsaw. Among these buildings the office projects alone won numerous awards and distinctions, while the A-4 complex from the Eko Park estate won an award during the annual exhibition of the Architects’ Council of Europe as the only Polish project presented in the European Parliament in Brussels in 2010.

    The presentations of buildings and projects that arose under Kuryłowicz’s direction were discussed in Polish and foreign books, including The Phaidon Atlas of Contemporary World Architecture (Phaidon Press, London, New York 2003), Materials for Architectural Design (Laurence King Publishing, London 2006), and numerous periodicals, including Architectural Review, World Architecture, Architektura-murator and Architektura & Business. Kuryłowicz & Associates also carried out projects that resulted both from victories in competitions (the National Forum of Music in Wrocław in 2005, the Language Departments Building for the University of Warsaw in 2006, the Ochota Campus for the University of Warsaw in 2007 and the Supersam office-commercial complex in Warsaw in 2007), and in long-term relationships with private investors (Wolf Immobilien Polen, Echo Investment, GTC, Qualia Investments, Eko Park and others).

  • 2002

    Kuryłowicz was awarded the academic title of habilitation on the basis of his work “Architektura – idea i jej realizacja 1998–1999” (Architecture: the idea and its execution, 1998-1999, Wydawnictwo Politechniki Krakowskiej, Kraków 2000).

    In 2002–2006 Kuryłowicz was the first professional responsibility ombudsman of the National Chamber of Polish Architects. Additionally, beginning in 1974 he also played an active role in the SARP Association of Polish Architects, where he served for many years as a vice president and competition judge. As part of SARP, he also worked with the UIA International Union of Architects.

  • 2003
    Kuryłowicz won an Award of Honour from the Association of Polish Architects.
  • 2009
    Kuryłowicz was awarded by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage for outstanding achievements.
  • 2010
    In 2010 he was invited to join the five-member UN Secretary General’s Advisory Committee for Reconstruction of the UN Headquarters in New York. He participated in the committee’s work through June 2011.
  • 2011
    On 6 June 2011 Stefan Kuryłowicz died in a plane crash in Asturias, Spain. He was buried in the Avenue of Honour, so-called Professors’ Avenue, in Powązki Military Cemetery in Warsaw.

Awards

Ministry of Culture & National Heritage for 2009 and the Honorary Prize of the Association of Polish Architects for 2003. Decorated with the Gold Cross of Merit for his role in the design and construction of Warsaw International Airport (1992) and 2nd Prize from the Ministry of Spatial Planning and Construction for outstanding artistic achievements in the area of Architecture and Construction for his design for the Fuji Film – Polska headquarters in ul. Płowiecka in Warsaw (1994). In 2009 he was recorded in the Golden Book of Warsaw University of Technology graduates. Kuryłowicz was honoured with numerous awards for completed buildings, including the SARP Annual Award for the Eko Park estate (2002), the Focus Filtrowa Office Centre (2001), Arcon ISC (1998) and Fuji Film (1995); the Grand Prize in the Życie w Architekturze (Life in Architecture) competition for Focus Filtrowa (2002), the Nautilus office building (2000), the South Korean Ambassador’s residence in Anin (2000) and Hector SA in ulica Gwiaździsta (1995). As part of the competition for Structure of the Year organized by the PZITB and the Infrastructure Ministry, Kuryłowicz’s designs won in 2000 (the LOT Polish Airlines headquarters), 2001 (Focus Filtrowa Business Centre), 2003 (the Avon cosmetics factory in Garwolin). Several of his projects – Nautilus (2000), Avon Cosmetics (2003) and Królewska (2004) – also won the title of Warsaw’s Favourite Building. Kuryłowicz won numerous awards in SARP and UIA architectural competitions, including for the Kielce air terminal (2009), the football stadium in Białystok (2007), the Ochota Group educational complex for the University of Warsaw (2007), the Warsaw University Philology and Linguistics building (2006), a design for the centre of Katowice (2006), the Concert Hall and Plac Wolności in Wrocław (2005), Rondo Dmowskiego in Warsaw (2004), a complex of buildings near Rondo ONZ in Warsaw (1995/1996), a concept for the reconstruction of Plac Krasińskiego in Warsaw (1989), the Corpus Christi church in Łomża (1987), the Church of the Holy Virgin of Jasna Góra in Łódź (1981), the central bank in Tripoli (1980), the National Theatre and Opera in Damascus (1979), the Wrocław Philharmonic (1975) and the Baltic Opera House in Gdańsk (1974).