For Sir Norman Foster—one of the greatest architects of this century and founder of Foster + Partners—the foundation his works are: innovation, sustainability and design.
In an interview early this year with Dezeen, a magazine on design and architecture, Foster discussed that sustainability has been the core of his philosophy from the start. “It was, in a way, creating an architecture that was rooted in an ecological movement. So that’s the roots of where we are now.”
He has been designing buildings that reduce energy and encourage contact with the natural world all his life. The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts built in 1978 is what Foster described as an example of a “breathing building.” California’s Apple Park campus, designed in 2018, is a unique structure: an unbroken circle powered by 100 per cent renewable energy. Bloomberg’s new European headquarters in London has facade of breathing “gills’’ and eco features, which uses 70 per cent less water and 40 per cent less energy than conventional office buildings.