Bernard Khoury


Bernard Khoury is a Lebanese architect. His work has been extensively published by the professional press. Khoury started an independent practice in 1993. Over the years, his office has developed an international reputation and a significant diverse portfolio of projects both locally and abroad.

Background

Khoury was born on August 19, 1968, in Beirut, Lebanon. His father, Khalil Khoury, was a Lebanese architect and designer who worked with exposed concrete, designing projects such as the Mont La Salle School Campus, the Municipal Stadium of Jounieh and the Interdesign Showroom building. Khoury’s father produced work at differing scales ranging from the design and production of furniture items to his participation in the development of the master plan for the reconstruction of the Beirut Central District in 1977.
Bernard Khoury lived in and out of Lebanon during the early years of the Civil War where he scarcely made it through secondary school, before pursuing his architectural studies in the United States of America, where he received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1990 and Bachelor of Architecture in 1991 from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), followed by a Masters in Architectural Studies in 1993 from Harvard University.

Career

Khoury started his professional career soon after his graduate studies in post-war Beirut, which became his territory of experimentation where he produced 16 unbuilt projects spanning a period of four years. During the early years of his practice, he was financially supported by his family's furniture manufacturing business that provided him with a design studio and gave him access to the workshop and manufacturing facilities of their factories.
Khoury first came to public and critical attention with the completion of the B018 music club in 1998, his first built project. This building sparked a string of temporary projects, through which Khoury built a reputation for his ability to produce critical interventions in problematic zones. These include his first six built projects: the BO18 Music Club, the Centrale project, Yabani R2, the BLC Bank, the Bank of Beirut pavilion in Chtaura, as well as the Black Box. In the media, various publications dubbed Khoury "the bad boy" of architecture in the Middle East.
Khoury's early clients came primarily from the entertainment industry. He then produced projects for local banks and real estate developers which implied permanent interventions and larger scale projects. During the booming period of post war years, he built a number of highly visible structures in Beirut. These according to Khoury were the product of very complex, problematic socio political conditions. Khoury’s first permanent building IB3, was completed in 2006, triggering a series of residential projects; these include plot #732, plot #183, plot #893, plots #2251 & 1314 in which Khoury designed his own residence. These were followed by the developments on plot #4371, plot #1282, and plot #1063 R2. Plots #1342 & 1343 R4, plot #1072 and plot #450 are high rise residential developments designed to make a forceful imprint on the cacophony that is the Beirut skyline.
To this date Khoury also built six projects in the mountainous regions of Lebanon, including but not limited to plot # 7950, a technological marvel housing 52 engines that operate its retractable roof, and plot # 4328 with its accessible inclined façade culminating in a linear lap pool.
He also developed the architectural identities and built an important number of commercial branches for Banque Libano Francaise, Bank of Beirut, and Banque Libanaise pour le Commerce.
His first international commission, the Pfefferberg Project located in Berlin, Germany, consisted of the conversion of an industrial block into a cultural quarter. Aborted commissions followed in Europe, including the Santa Cesarea project in Italy, as well as residential projects in England, Spain and Serbia. More recently, Khoury has been commissioned projects in various territories. These include a number of interventions for the Tumo Center for Creative Technologies in Yerevan, Vagarshapat, Koghb, Paris, Masis, Gyumri, Beirut and Los Angeles. In addition to the Tumo Park and the Epygi Park Master Plan in Yerevan, and the AGBU NKR Campus in Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia.
Other projects on the international front include: the Babyn Yar Memorial in Kyiv, and Vyzvolennia Square & Dasu Building in Mariupol, Ukraine; Corniche de Dakar in Dakar, Senegal; Miami Hand Center in Miami and the Urban Confluence Silicon Valley R1 in San Jose, US; and Coziness Valley in Murmansk, Russia.
Khoury has worked on numerous large-scale projects in the Arab world. These comprise the Saray Mixed Use Development in Casablanca R2 in Casablanca, Morocco as well as a number of schemes in the Arabian Gulf region, such as the Fintas Market, the Andalus Development, the VVIP Terminal, the Kuwait Free Trade Zone Park and Al Ghanim Industries in Kuwait; the Alargan Business Bay Development, the Ajman Resort, Plot PJTRH00, Al Zorah Resort and Plot ELV01 in the United Arab Emirates; Al Khayran Oberoi Resort, Al Ghubra Residential Complex, and Al Qurm Mixed Use Development in Oman; Surramanraa and Al Khozama in Saudi Arabia; the Mixed Development Project in Seef District, the Suspended Gardens of Manama and the Suspended Gardens of Reef Island in Bahrain; the Long Way Hub in Libya; Sultana in Egypt; the 7 Club in Qatar;.

Academic

Khoury has taught at the American University of Beirut, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, l’École Spéciale d’Architecture in Paris, the Second University of Naples, Otis College of Art and Design, Istanbul Bilgi University, and the University of Miami. He is co-founder of the Arab Center for Architecture.

Experimental

  • 2021 – Stitching the Skyline Seoul, Korea
  • 2013 – C’était un Rendez-vous Mexico City, Mexico
  • 2012 – I Wish I Could Make Them All Look Like You Beirut, Lebanon
  • 2010 – Derailing Beirut Rome, Italy
  • 2009 – Catherine Wants to Know Beirut, Lebanon
  • 2008 – P.O.W 08 Torino, Italy
  • 2006 – SS / DW Beirut, Lebanon
  • 1991 – Evolving Scars Cambridge, U.S.A.

Awards

  • 2008 – CNBC Award
  • 2004 – Architecture + Award
  • 2001 – Borromini Prize honorable mention [awarded by the municipality of Rome, Special Mention for Architects Under 40 Years of Age