Lacaton graduated in architecture from the and received a masters in urban planning from the University of Bordeaux in 1984.
Academic career
Anne Lacaton was appointed as Associate Professor of Architecture & Design at the ETH Zurich. As an academic teacher with socio-political honesty and an ideological approach to architecture, her designs and constructions make a clear statement in support of the human rather than the iconic. She shows meaningful consideration for the concerns of the people involved, such as residents in areas undergoing redevelopment. Her design aim to promote user participation, both in residential buildings as well as schools or museums. She was Visiting Professor at the University of Madrid, Master Housing ; Swiss Federal Institute of Technology ; University of Florida, Ivan Smith Studio ; University of NY-Buffalo, Clarkson Chair ; Pavillon Neu ize OBC-Palais de Tokyo, Paris ; Harvard Graduate School of Design ; Kenzo Tange & Design Critic. She was a keynote speaker at the 6th International LafargeHolcim Forum for Sustainable Construction in Cairo, Egypt where she presented how “Never demolish, always transform” is at the heart of the design process of Lacaton & Vassal including the renovation program of more than 500 dwellings in the Cité du Grand Parc in Bordeaux, France originally constructed in the early 1960s. Anne Lacaton was a member of the LafargeHolcim Awards jury for region Europe ; and will be a member of the Global LafargeHolcim Awards jury in 2021.
Projects with Philippe Vassal
A great deal of Lacaton's work has been in partnership with Phillip Vassal, the duo have worked on a number of projects together. The firm designed the Palais de Tokyocontemporary art gallery in Paris, completed in 2001. The project, a bare bones reclamation of a semi-derelict art deco building near the Seine, was short-listed for the Mies van der Rohe prize in 2003 and has been immensely influential as perhaps the most extreme of found-space galleries. Openly proclaiming to be a reflection and search for architectural economy, the work undertaken by Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal focuses on reduced-cost constructions in order to rejuvenate the dialogue with contracting authorities. Research on hybridizations, between a contemporary building concept and the use of the most diversified techniques, produces projects that make the most of construction programs by upsetting building contractors' standard usages. In 2005, Lacaton & Vassal and architect Frédéric Druot were selected to reshape the Tour Bois le Prêtre, a 17-story housing tower on the city’s northern edge designed by architect Raymond Lopez in 1957. The team cut away most of the thick façade’s panels, installing balconies and large sliding windows in their place. Besides opening the apartments to more natural light, the units are being significantly enlarged and opened, and the firm installed new plumbing, bathrooms, ventilation, and electric systems. The project won the Design of the Year by the UK’s Design Museum. The practice has received the Erich Schelling Award, International Fellowship of the Royal Institute of British Architects, Daylight and building components of the Velum Foundation, Copenhagen, Heinrich Tessenow Gold Medal, and the Mies van der Rohe Award.
Plus
Lacaton & Vassal have worked with Frederic Druot on sustainable housing projects, reinventing old 1960's era social housing in a project called Plus. Plus is an initiative to upgrade old social housing into better living spaces. They've published literature on the project.