List of works by Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry was a Pritzker Prize-winning architect. His buildings, including his private residence, have become tourist attractions. His style is sometimes described as Deconstructivist or postmodern, although he has rejected the second term.[1][2]
Completed
| Name | City | US State/ Country |
Completed | Other Information | Image |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| David Cabin | Idyllwild | California | 1957 | Built with Greg Walsh. Owned by Matthew and Mary Norris Idyllwild, California |
|
| Kline Residence | Bel Air | California | 1963 | ||
| Banneker Fire Station[3] | Columbia | Maryland | 1967 |
| |
| Exhibit Center[4] | Columbia | Maryland | 1967 |
| |
| Merriweather Post Pavilion[5] | Columbia | Maryland | 1967 |
| |
| Park West Apartments[6][7][8] | Irvine | California | 1970 | Owned by the Irvine Company. Designed with Greg Walsh; landscape design by POD. Formerly University Park Apartments. | |
| Ronald Davis Studio & Residence | Malibu | California | 1972 | Renovated by Sue and Alex Glasscock, later owned by Patrick and Jillian Dempsey. Featured in Architectural Digest in 2014.[9] Destroyed November 2018 Woolsey Fire | |
| Rouse Company Headquarters[10] | Columbia | Maryland | 1974 | Renovated into a Whole Foods Market in 2014 |
|
| Concord Pavilion | Concord | California | 1975 | Originally the Chronicle Pavilion, it has also been called the Sleep Train Pavilion |
|
| Harper House | Baltimore | Maryland | 1977 | ||
| Gehry Residence[11] | Santa Monica | California | 1978 | Frank Gehry's home |
|
| Loyola Law School (various buildings)[12] | Los Angeles | California | 1978–2002 |
| |
| Spiller House | Venice | California | 1980 | ||
| Santa Monica Place | Santa Monica | California | 1980 | Mostly demolished and renovated from 2008 to 2010 |
|
| Cabrillo Marine Aquarium | San Pedro | California | 1981 | ||
| California Aerospace Museum, California Museum of Science and Industry | Los Angeles | California | 1984 |
| |
| Edgemar Retail Complex | Santa Monica | California | 1984 |
| |
| Norton House[13] | Venice | California | 1984 |
| |
| Frances Howard Goldwyn Hollywood Regional Library | Hollywood | California | 1985 |
| |
| Information and Computer Science (ICS)/Engineering Research Facility (ICS/ERF)[14][15][16] | University of California, Irvine | California | 1986 | Awarded by the American Institute of Architects in 1986 and 1987. Demolished in 2007.[15] |
|
| Sirmai-Peterson House[17] | Thousand Oaks | California | 1984–86 | ||
| Winton Guest House | Hudson Valley | New York | 1987 | Moved in 2016 to its current location from The Gainey Conference Center in Owatonna, Minnesota .[18][19] | |
| Yale Psychiatric Institute (now Yale New Haven Psychiatric Hospital)[20] | Yale University, New Haven | Connecticut | 1989 | In collaboration with Allan Dehar Associates of New Haven | |
| Rockwell and Marna Schnabel House[21] | Brentwood | California | 1986–89 | ||
| Herman Miller factory (currently William Jessup University) | Rocklin | California | 1987–89 | Factory closed in 2001 and was purchased by William Jessup University. Underwent re-design by architect Russ Taylor prior to opening of campus in 2004.[22] | |
| Vitra Design Museum | Weil am Rhein | Germany | 1989 | ||
| Rockwell Engineering Center[8] and McDonnell Douglas Engineering Auditorium[23] | University of California, Irvine | California | 1990[24] | ||
| 360 Newbury Street renovation[25] | Boston | Massachusetts | 1991 | Renovated luxury condominiums. |
|
| Chiat/Day Building | Venice | California | 1991 |
| |
| Artists' Studios | Santa Monica | California | 1991 | Mixed use, residential and working artists. 6 loft units, each privately owned |
|
| Iowa Advanced Technology Laboratories[26] | University of Iowa, Iowa City | Iowa | 1992 |
| |
| Disney Village | Disneyland Paris, Marne-la-Vallée | France | 1992 | Formerly Festival Disney |
|
| Olympic Fish | Olympic Village, Barcelona | Spain | 1992 |
| |
| Frederick Weisman Museum of Art[27] | University of Minnesota, Minneapolis | Minnesota | 1993 |
| |
| Center for the Visual Arts[28] | Toledo | Ohio | 1993 |
| |
| Cinémathèque Française[29] | Paris | France | 1994 |
| |
| Vitra International Headquarters[30] | Basel | Switzerland | 1994 | ||
| Siedlung Goldstein[31] | Frankfurt | Germany | 1994 |
| |
| Energie Forum Innovation[32] | Bad Oeynhausen | Germany | 1995 | ||
| Anaheim Ice[33][8] | Anaheim | California | 1995 | Formerly Disney Ice |
|
| Team Disney Anaheim[34] | Anaheim | California | 1996 | Administration facility for the Disneyland Resort |
|
| Dancing House | Prague | Czech Republic | 1996 | ||
| Guggenheim Museum Bilbao | Bilbao | Spain | 1997 |
| |
| Der Neue Zollhof[35] | Düsseldorf | Germany | 1999 |
| |
| University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center[36] | University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati | Ohio | 1999 |
| |
| Condé Nast Publishing Headquarters Cafeteria[37] | Times Square, New York City | New York | 2000 | ||
| DZ Bank building | Pariser Platz, Berlin | Germany | 2000 |
| |
| Museum of Pop Culture | Seattle | Washington | 2000 |
| |
| Gehry Tower | Hanover | Germany | 2001 |
| |
| Issey Miyake flagship store | Manhattan | New York | 2001 | ||
| Weatherhead School of Management Peter B. Lewis building[38][39] | Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland | Ohio | 2002 |
| |
| Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts[40][41] | Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson | New York | 2003 | ||
| Maggie's Dundee, Ninewells Hospital[42][43] | Dundee | Scotland | 2003 |
| |
| Walt Disney Concert Hall | Los Angeles | California | 2003 | ||
| Ray and Maria Stata Center[44] | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge | Massachusetts | 2004 |
| |
| Jay Pritzker Pavilion[45] | Millennium Park, Chicago | Illinois | 2004 |
| |
| BP Pedestrian Bridge | Millennium Park, Chicago | Illinois | 2004 | ||
| MARTa Herford | Herford | Germany | 2005 |
| |
| IAC/InterActiveCorp West Coast Headquarters | West Hollywood | California | 2005 | ||
| Marqués de Riscal Hotel[46] | Elciego | Spain | 2006 |
| |
| IAC Building | Chelsea, Manhattan[47][48] | New York | 2007 | ||
| Mariza show stage, at the Walt Disney Concert Hall[49] | Los Angeles | California | 2007 | ||
| Art Gallery of Ontario | Toronto | Ontario | 2008 | under renovation |
|
| Peter B. Lewis Library[50] | Princeton University, Princeton | New Jersey | 2008 |
| |
| Serpentine Gallery 2008 Summer Pavilion[51] | London | England | 2008 | Temporary |
|
| Novartis Pharma A.G. Campus[52] | Basel | Switzerland | 2009 |
| |
| Danish Cancer Society Counseling Center[53] | Aarhus | Denmark | 2009 |
| |
| Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health[54] | Las Vegas | Nevada | 2010 | ||
| Ohr-O'Keefe Museum Of Art[55] | Biloxi | Mississippi | 2010 | Originally planned to open in 2006, hit by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Additional buildings opened in 2012 |
|
| New World Center[56] | Miami Beach | Florida | 2011 |
| |
| New York by Gehry at Eight Spruce Street[57] | Manhattan | New York | 2011 | First skyscraper[58] |
|
| Opus Hong Kong[59] | Hong Kong | Hong Kong | 2011 | 12-story residential block located at 53 Stubbs Road, developed by Swire Group. |
|
| Pershing Square Signature Center[60] | Manhattan | New York | 2012 | 70,000 sq. ft. performing arts center. | |
| Duplex Residence[61] | New Orleans | Louisiana | 2012 | Designed and built for the Make It Right Foundation New Orleans. LEED Platinum rated | |
| "Five Hole"
Warming Hut[62] |
Winnipeg | Canada | 2012 | Temporary timber and ice warming hut on the river |
|
| Maggie's Hong Kong[63] | Hong Kong | Hong Kong | 2013 |
| |
| Biomuseo[64] | Panama City | Panama | 2014 |
| |
| Louis Vuitton Foundation for Creation[65][66][67] | Paris | France | 2014 |
| |
| Dr Chau Chak Wing Building[68][69][70] | University of Technology, Sydney | Australia | 2014 |
| |
| Facebook West Campus[71][72] | Menlo Park | California | 2015 | ||
| Pierre Boulez Concert Hall | Berlin | Germany | 2017 | ||
| Frank Gehry Residence | Santa Monica | California | 2017 | ||
| Michael Eisner Residence[73] | Basalt | Colorado | 2018 | ||
| Thomas Safran & Associates Headquarters[74] | Brentwood | California | 2019 | ||
| Louis Vuitton Maison Seoul[75] | Seoul | South Korea | 2019 | ||
| Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial[76][77] | Washington | D.C. | 2020 |
| |
| LUMA Arles[78] | Arles | France | 2021 |
| |
| Youth Orchestra Los Angeles Concert Hall[79][80] | Inglewood | California | 2021 | ||
| The Children's Institute[81] | Watts, Los Angeles | California | 2022 | ||
| Grand Avenue Project[82] | Los Angeles | California | 2022 |
| |
| Warner Brothers Second Century[83][84] | Burbank | California | 2023 |
Works in progress
In construction
- Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, UAE[85]
- Forma (Toronto), Canada[86]
- Colburn School Campus Extension and Concert Hall, Los Angeles, California[87]
Proposed
- World's Jewish Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel[88]
- Torre La Sagrera in Barcelona, Spain[89]
- Ocean Avenue Project, Santa Monica, California[90]
- Mirvish Towers & Princess of Wales Theatre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (proposed – no start date yet)[91]
- Jazz Bakery, Culver City, California[92]
- Luxury hotel, apartments and offices, Sønderborg, Denmark
- Cultural Center, Łódź, Poland (design not yet accepted)[93]
- Dudamel Hall, Barquisimeto, Venezuela[94]
- Battersea Power Station redevelopment Phase 3 (the "High Street" phase), London, England (as joint architect along with Foster + Partners)[95]
- China Medical University Shuinan Campus food court and event hall, Taichung, Taiwan[96]
On hold
- Philadelphia Art Museum Expansion
- Frank Gehry Visitor Center at Hall Winery Napa Valley, Saint Helena, California (on hold)[97][98]
- The Point (Five Star Hotel & Event Center), Lehi, Utah (project on hold)[99][100]
- Suna Kıraç Cultural Center, Istanbul, Turkey (construction yet to begin)[101]
- The Carrie Hamilton Theatre, Pasadena Playhouse, Pasadena, California[102]
- Gary Player's Saadiyat Beach Golf Course Clubhouse, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates[103][104]
Unbuilt
- Le Clos Jordanne Winery, Lincoln, Ontario, Canada[105]
- Museum of Tolerance, Jerusalem, Israel (Gehry stepped down from the project in March 2010)[106][107]
- Atlantic Yards, New York City (left project in June 2009)[108]
- Corcoran Gallery expansion, Washington, D.C. (project was abandoned in 2005)
- Guggenheim Museum expansion campus in downtown New York City (project was abandoned in December 2002)
- World Trade Center site Performing Arts Complex, New York City (announced October 2004, left project in 2014)[109][110]
Other works
- Easy Edges furniture collection (in production from 1969 to 1973)[111]
- Official trophy for the World Cup of Hockey (2004, 2016)[112]
- Superlight chair for Emeco (2004)[113]
- Jewellery collection for Tiffany & Co. (2006)[114]
- Louis Vuitton luggage (2014)[115]
- A yacht called Foggy (2015)[116][117]
- Bottle for Hennesy cognac (2020)[118]
References
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- ^ Vozzella, Laura (June 24, 2001). "Famed artist's Exhibit Center inspires debate in Columbia". The Baltimore Sun. ProQuest 406478621. Retrieved December 8, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Case, Wesley (July 12, 2017). "50 Years of Merriweather: A Look at a Concert Venue's Legacy, Future". The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on July 12, 2017. Retrieved December 8, 2025.
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- ^ a b c Curtis, Cathy (September 26, 1994). "New Anaheim Ice Center Design Will Go With the Floe". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved September 15, 2016.
- ^ Mayer Rus (March 2014), Patrick Dempsey's Welcoming Malibu Home Architectural Digest.
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- ^ Frank Gehry's first Asia project: 'The building designed itself' CNNGo September 13, 2011.
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buildings by Frank Gehry.
- Gehry Partners, LLP, Gehry's architecture firm


















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