Louvre pyramid architect was awarded RIBA Gold Medal in 2010

Architect IM Pei has died aged 102, at his home in Manhattan.

92-year-old Pei, whose buildings include the Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, 2008; the expansion of the Louvre in Paris, 1983-1993; the Oare Pavilion in Wiltshire, 2004; and the Suzhou Museum in China, 2006.

IM Pei, whose buildings include the Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, 2008; the expansion of the Louvre in Paris, 1983-1993; the Oare Pavilion in Wiltshire, 2004; and the Suzhou Museum in China, 2006.

His son Li Chung Pei, one of two of his children who became architects, told the his father had recently celebrated his birthday with a family dinner.

Pei, who was born in China but began his career in America, became one of the most respected architects in the world. 

His buildings include the Louvre pyramid and the museum鈥檚 expansion, 1983-1993; the Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, 2008; the Oare Pavilion in Wiltshire, 2004; and the Suzhou Museum in China, 2006.

louvre-shutterstock_778222297

Louvre pyramid

He was still accepting commissions into his 80s, long after he had officially retired.

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Ieoh Ming Pei Pei was born in 1917 in Guangzhou in China, moving to the United States at the age of 18, and becoming a naturalised citizen in 1954. He has completed more than 170 projects and 50 masterplans in his lifetime, though only one project in the UK 鈥 the small private pavilion in Wiltshire. He is best known in Europe for his work on the Louvre in Paris during the 1980s, including the now iconic glazed pyramid.

Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, 2008

Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, 2008

He was awarded the RIBA Gold Medal in 2010, nominated by David Adjaye who described the architect as a 鈥済iant in the canon of greats鈥.

It committee was chaired by then RIBA president Ruth Reed, who said of Pei: 鈥淗e is one of the greats of 20th 鈥 and 21st 鈥 century architecture; a man whose work I have always admired. A list of his influences and those he has influenced reads like a roll-call of the modern movement. Seldom has such a reward been so overdue or so just.鈥

The Suzhou Museum in China, 2006.
 
The Suzhou Museum in China, 2006.
 

The official citation described 92-year-old Pei as an 鈥渆xtraordinary gift to architecture鈥.

Adjaye said: 鈥淚 remember as a young student first visiting the Louvre in Paris and marvelling at its extraordinary ability to unify and modernise what was a much-loved but disparate institution, and beholding its magnificent, gravity defying, glass pyramid. He became a role model for me as a young architect.鈥 

the Oare Pavilion in Wiltshire, 2004

The Oare Pavilion in Wiltshire, 2004

The then RIBA vice president Jane Duncan said Pei had been the inspiration for generations of architects. 鈥淗e was an inspiration when I was at college years ago. It鈥檚 amazing it has taken so long for us to honour him,鈥 she said, revealing that the jury was unanimous in its decision as soon as it discovered Pei had not been honoured years earlier.

the expansion of the Louvre in Paris, 1983-1993

The expansion of the Louvre in Paris, 1983-1993