Inga Saffron


Inga Saffron is an American journalist and architecture critic. She won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism while writing for The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Biography

Saffron was raised in Levittown, New York and attended New York University. She studied abroad in France for one year, then decided not to return to school and moved to Dublin. In Ireland, she wrote for many local publications and worked as a freelancer with Newsweek. Upon returning to the United States, Saffron wrote for the Courier-News of New Jersey. She joined The Philadelphia Inquirer in 1984. As the Inquirer's Moscow correspondent from 1994 to 1998, Saffron covered the Yugoslav Wars and First Chechen War. She has written an architecture criticism column titled "Changing Skyline" since 1999.

Career

Saffron still writes for The Philadelphia Inquirer, which she joined in 1985 as a suburban reporter. She spent five years in Eastern Europe as a correspondent for the Inquirer. In 1999, Saffron started her "Changing Skyline" column for the Inquirer. She was a Loeb Fellow at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design in 2012.

Awards

Since becoming The Philadelphia Inquirer's resident architecture critic in 1999, Saffron has won many awards for her insightful and pointed critiques of architecture, planning, and urbanism in her city. Saffron won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism in 2014 after receiving nominations for the prize in 2004, 2008, and 2009. She is also the 2010 recipient of the Gene Burd Urban Journalism Award. Saffron was one of two architecture critics to be honored with the 2018 Vincent Scully Prize, awarded by the National Building Museum; her fellow honoree was Robert Campbell, who is architecture critic of The Boston Globe.

Marriage and family

She is married to writer Ken Kalfus, with whom she has a daughter, Sky.

External Links