VIDEO | In Residence With Fernando Romero

18 May 2014
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< 1 min read
The architect opens up his modernist villa for the first time, for Nowness to show us his luxury lifestyle…

“To me, this house is the ultimate modernity dream come true,” says Fernando Romero of the two-story, mid-century gem he calls home. “It is extremely flexible for all types of activities: for family, for socializing, for living.” Designed in 1955 by homegrown architect Francisco Artigas, the house is located in the leafy suburbs of Mexico City, adjacent to one of largest city parks in the Western Hemisphere, Bosque de Chapultepec. Romero has lived in the house with his wife and five children since 2010, yet this is the first time anybody has been granted access to document his private family villa. Before founding his architecture practice FR-EE in 2000, Romero -along withBjarke IngelsandOle Scheeren-began his career at OMA as a protégé of Dutch starchitect Rem Koolhas. Recognized for his futuristic aesthetic and his sustainable agenda, Romero’s impressive Soumaya Museum in downtown Mexico City is a curvaceous, aluminum-tiled building that houses the world-class art collection of telecommunications billionaire, Carlos Slim, who also happens to be his father in-law. Next, Romero is putting the finishing touches on the Miami Chapel in Florida, a museum in Panama, and a Contemporary Art Museum in Tulum. “The underground Mexico City Aquarium near the Soumaya is expected to be completed in a few months time too, and we are also doing heavy research and design for a 21st-century city for emerging economies: the FR-EE City!”

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