Rafael Calventi
Rafael Calventi Gaviño was a Dominican architect and diplomat.
Early life
Calventi was born in La Vega, Dominican Republic, to Juana Cintrón Gaviño and Arturo Calventi Suárez, both Puerto Rican immigrants.Calventi studied at the Sapienza University of Rome, Italy, where he was a pupil of Pier Luigi Nervi and obtained the title of Doctor of Architecture. After his graduation he worked in the studios of Marcel Breuer and I.M. Pei in New York and Pierre Dufau in Paris. He is considered to have been a representative architect of the modernist movement in Latin America.
Career
In 1962 Calventi began his professional practice in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, standing out as a designer and educator, with the axis of a group of young architects. In addition, he joined the University Renewal Movement, composed of professors, students, and employees of the University of Santo Domingo, which managed to modernize the academic standards of the institution and democratize access to higher education in the Dominican Republic. Following this the School of Architecture was created from the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo and he became its first director, between 1966 and 1968. There he was a professor of Architectural Composition and Theory of Architecture. He was also one of the founders of the Technological Institute of Santo Domingo in the 1972. Foremost in reknowb among Calventi's completed structures is the headquarters for Banco Central de Reublica Dominicana in Santo Domingo which was realized in 1978. The building has been described as belonging to the Brutalism genre of architectural design.In the public service sector he served as Deputy Director of the Office of the National District of Urban Planning and Design Chief of the Directorate of Buildings in the Ministry of Public Works and Communications of the Dominican Republic. In 2005 he received a Special Tribute for his life's work from the Dominican Chamber of Construction. In 1997 he was a member of the National Commission on Urban Affairs of the Dominican Republic and was also a member of the Executive Committee of Cultural Heritage of the Dominican Republic. He was a member of the French Academy of Architecture and of the Dominican College Engineers, Architects and Surveyors.