Get to know the 2022 Connecticut Innovator,

Joeb Moore

Mr. Moore’s work has received over 60 National, Regional, and State architectural design awards. In 2010 Residential Architect Magazine named him one of the “Top 50 Residential Architects in the US.” Most recently, Mr. Moore has been elevated to the prestigious College of Fellows in the American Institute of Architects in recognition of the aesthetic, scientific, and practical significance to the profession. He is also on the Board of Trustees of The Cultural Landscape Foundation and a senior advisor to the Pella Design Council.

Recent awards include a 2021 AIA New England Design Excellence Award, a 2020 AIA-CT Excellence Award for Slice House as “Best of Year,” three 2018 AIA-CT Honor Awards, a 2017 Build Architecture Award for the “Best High-End Residential Firm in the NY Metro Area.” A 2016 AIA: New England Design Award for the Preservation & Adaptive Reuse of Lincoln/Stonington Residence, a 2015 AIA National Housing Honor Award for the Bridge House. A 2010 AIA National Housing Award for the Spiral House, which also received the Chicago Athenaeum’s annual “American Architecture Award” and was displayed at the International Biennial of Architecture in Buenos Aires as a part of “The City and the World” exhibition by The European Center of Architecture, Art, Design, and Urban Studies. A 2011 & 2009 “WOOD” Award from the North American Wood Council. And several “Best of Year” citations from Interior Design Magazine. Mr. Moore has been published widely in a range of magazines and books including Dwell, Architecture, Architectural Record, Interior Design, Residential Architect, Metropolis, and Arch Daily. Most recent books include Taschen Books’ Architecture Now – Houses 2011, The 2011 and 2010 WOOD Institute Books, and The Nice House Book, 2010.

Mr. Moore is an Adjunct Professor of Architecture at the Barnard/Columbia Undergraduate Architecture Department. He joined the faculty in 1992 and continues to teach design studios and history/theory seminars. From 1996-2006 he was the Assistant Director of the Undergraduate Architecture Department and Coordinator of the History & Theory Track curriculum. His academic research focuses on three key areas: The history and theory of aesthetics & beauty in architecture; architecture in the expanded field of landscape, art, & architecture; and the historical and contemporary relationship between architecture, technology, and culture.

 

 

A Tribute to Joeb Moore