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Lance Hosey, AIA, LEED AP, has over seventeen years of professional experience in a wide variety of project scales and types, including cultural, corporate, residential, and interiors. With WM+P, he has acted as lead designer and Project Architect on a number of high-profile projects, including the Museum of Life and the Environment and the Fuller Theological Seminary Chapel.
Prior to joining WM+P, Hosey played significant roles in internationally renowned firms such as Rafael Viñoly Architects and Gwathmey Siegel & Associates, both in New York. Independently and in association with other firms, his work has been published extensively and has won many awards for design and research. He has been featured in Metropolis magazine’s “Next Generation” program and Architectural Record’s “emerging architect” series. In 2006 he won the prestigious annual fellowship from the Michael Kalil Endowment for Smart Design, and in 2002 he won the international competition to design the African-American Burial Ground Memorial at Monticello, the historic home of Thomas Jefferson.
Hosey’s essays on the environmental and social aspects of design have appeared in The Washington Post, Metropolis, Architectural Record, and Architecture, and he has a regular “green” column in Architect magazine. With Kira Gould, he is co-author of Women in Green: Voices of Sustainable Design (Ecotone Publishing, 2007), and Ecology and Design, the American Institute of Architects’ report on sustainability and architecture education. He has spoken publicly in many venues, including the AIA National Convention, Greenbuild, EnvironDesign, New York’s Center for Architecture, and various universities. Hosey sits on advisory boards for the AIA Committee on the Environment, Ecobuild America, West Coast Green, and the USGBC’s Living Building Challenge. He has taught at Yale University, the University of Virginia, George Washington University, and the Catholic University of America. Born and raised in Houston, TX, Hosey studied jazz at the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, and has degrees from Yale and Columbia.
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