EDUCATION

Ball State University, College of Architecture & Planning, Bachelor of Architecture, 1973

The Architectural Association, London, 1972,
Principal Tutor: Cedric Price

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS

Fellow, American Institute of Architects,
1995-present

Senior Fellow, Design Futures Council, 2009

Chair, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill Foundation,
1995-2002

Urban Land Institute, Commercial Council,
1999-present

San Francisco Architectural Heritage Lilienthal Society Fellow,
2005 - present

San Francisco Architectural Heritage Board, Board & Issues Committee,
1999-2004

Lambda Alpha, International Real Estate Honorary Board Member,
2000-present

San Francisco Architectural Foundation, Advisory Board,
1998-2000

Advisory Board Member, 2AES, Center for Critical Architecture,
1995-1998

Rice Design Alliance,
1985-present

Southwestern University Advisory Board Member,
1990-2000

Craig W. Hartman

FAIA, Design Partner

Craig W. Hartman, FAIA, is a design partner based in SOM’s San Francisco Office. His work with SOM in the United States, Europe, and Asia, while extremely broad in its typology—ranging from entire urban districts to singular works of commercial, civic, and cultural architecture—consistently adheres to a rigorous modern vocabulary that acknowledges issues of place involving climate, physical and cultural landscape, and historic precedent.

Mr. Hartman joined SOM in 1973 and served as design partner in the firm’s Houston and Washington, D.C. offices before coming to San Francisco, where he has established the West Coast architecture group as one of the region’s premier design practices. Just as SOM is a multifaceted practice encompassing architecture, planning, engineering, interiors, and graphic design, Mr. Hartman’s work demonstrates how, through interdisciplinary collaboration, projects can achieve innovation in design and building performance.

Mr. Hartman’s work has been recognized with over 100 awards for design, which, in addition to 8 national AIA Honor Awards, includes two Gold LEED® Certifications and AIA awards for environmental sustainability at Treasure Island and the University of California, Merced. He also received a Federal Design Achievement Award in the 2000 Presidential Design Awards Program.

In 2001, Hartman became the youngest recipient of the Maybeck Award, an award presented periodically by the California Chapter of the AIA to an individual in recognition of “lifetime achievement in architectural design.” During the dedication ceremony for The Cathedral of Christ the Light in September 2008, the Vatican’s Knighthood for Service to Society (St. Sylvester) was bestowed upon Hartman by Pope Benedictus XVI. He also received an Honorary Doctorate of the Arts from Ball State University during the May 2009 commencement ceremony.



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