Frank Barkow is an American architect. His practice Barkow Leibinger, founded with his partner Regine Leibinger, is known for industrial architecture, domestic and cultural projects, as well as for the two landmark office towers, the TRUTEC Building in Seoul and the Tour Total in Berlin. Both Barkow and Leibinger favor a material architecture, a conviction that architectural ideas and materials are inherently related and interconnected. This allows their work to respond to advancing knowledge and technology as well as to the handcrafted, and thus explore new materials and their applications.
Education and career
Frank Barkow studied architecture at Montana State University and at Harvard GSD under the chairmanship of Rafael Moneo. While at Harvard, he met Regine Leibinger, a German architect. In 1993, Frank and Regine founded Barkow Leibinger in Berlin, Germany.
With the AA London, Barkow Leibinger published “An Atlas of Fabrication” - a compilation of architectural research, as well as “Bricoleur/Bricolage” - which led Hal Foster, Princeton, to following statement in the most recent publication “Spielraum”: “In the end Barkow Leibinger are bricoleurs as much as they are engineers.... There is always an element of inspired performance in bricolage. And as the greatest philosophers in German aesthetics tell us, such play is also essential to art; it opens up a realm for an imaginative response to any question. In the end, this is what Barkow Leibinger offer us all: Spielraum, room for play, space for invention.“
Exhibitions, collections and prizes
Barkow Leibinger’s work has been widely exhibited, national and internationally, including the Architecture Biennale in Venice 2008 and 2014, the 4th Marrakech Biennial "Higher Atlas", the Pinakothek der Moderne Munich, Oslo Architecture Triennale, DAM Frankfurt, MoMA New York, 032c Berlin, AA London, among others. Frank Barkow co-curated the exhibition of twelve Berlin based architecture practices "How Soon is Now" at Judin Gallery Berlin in 2014. Barkow Leibinger’s work is included in the permanent collections of MoMA, New York, and the Deutsches Architektur Museum, Frankfurt. They have won three National AIA Honor Awards for Architecture and the Marcus Prize for Architecture, Milwaukee, among others.
Selected projects
Day-care Center, Berlin Buchholz, 1997/1998
Customer and Training Center, Farmington, Connecticut, USA, 1999
Biosphere, Potsdam, 2001
Customer and Administration Building, Ditzingen, 2003
Grüsch Pavillon I and II, Grüsch, Switzerland, 2001/2004
Training Center with Cafeteria, Neukirch, 2005
Trutec Building, Seoul, Korea, 2006
Gate House, Ditzingen, 2007
Campus Restaurant, Ditzingen, 2008
Laser Factory, Farmington, Connecticut, USA, 2008
Office Building with Training Workshop, Hettingen, 2009