Ram Karmi, Israeli architect, educator. Certified RIBA. Recipient Second prize, Competition Israel Museum, Jerusalem, 1960, Competition Bank Israel, 1966, Rechter prize, 1967, 1969-1970, 1999, First prize, International Competition Supreme Court Building, 1986, First prize Prime Minister' General’ s Office Building, 1996, Israel prize, 2002. Member of Israel Association United Architects.
Background
Ram Karmi was born in Jerusalem. His father was architect Dov Karmi. Karmi grew up in Tel Aviv, served in the Israel Defense Forces in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.
His father, Dov Karmi, was also an architect and won the Israel Prize in 1957.
Early in his career Ram Karmi was employed in his father"s office where he worked on plans for the Knesset along with the design competition winner Joseph Klarwein.
Education
He studied architecture at the Technion, Haifa, and Architectural Association School of Architecture, London in 1951-1956.
Career
He was head of the Tel Aviv-based Ram Karmi Architects company, and is known for his Brutalist style. He was one of the first soldiers to join the Nahal. Karmi planned the Negev Center, Beersheba, in 1960 and El First Rate (at Lloyd's) building, Tel Aviv, in 1963.
He continued his architectural work while lecturing at the Technion, designing the Amal School in Tel Aviv and the Tel Aviv Central Business Station.
According to Karmi, after the 1967 Six-Day War, the changed atmosphere in Israeli society caused him to re-think his brutalist style. In 1974, Karmi voluntarily became the chief architect in the Housing and Construction Minister of Israel, a position he held until 1979, and worked to re-design the near-ubiquitous public housing projects in Israel.
1981 he finished the Hecht Synagogue in Jerusalem. The building, designed by Karmi and Karmi Melamede opened in 1992.
New York Times architecture critic Paul Goldberger wrote of Karmi"s design, "the sharpness of the Mediterranean architectural tradition and the dignity of the law are here married with remarkable grace." Beginning in 2007, Karmi was the architect in charge of renovating the Habima Theatre.
Karmi taught at the Technion, Haifa between 1964 and 1994. He lectured at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Columbia University and the University of Houston. Karmi was a full professor at the School of Architecture of Ariel University Center of Samaria.
The massive Tel Aviv Central Business Station, which Karmi designed along with the architects Tzvi Komet and Ya"el Rothschild, has been criticized over the years for being a difficult to navigate bloated structure which also destroyed the neighborhood it was built in, despite numerous advertising campaigns and improvements.
In an interview, Haim Avigal, the Chief Executive Officer of the station from 2005, downplayed the navigation complaints, but said that "if I caught the architect who designed this building, I"d beat him up". In 2010, his renovation of Habima Theatre, which at the time was still under way after three years of development, was fiercely criticized.
Karmi was also involved in the Holyland Park project in Jerusalem, which is called the "Monster on the Hill" by many Jerusalemites.
Membership
Member of Israel Association United Architects.