Arthur Mamou-Mani


Arthur Georges Joel Mamou-Mani, AAdip ARB/RIBA FRSA is a French architect. Mamou-Mani is director of the architecture and design practice Mamou-Mani Ltd which specializes in a new kind of pop-up, digital fabrication led architecture.

Biography

He is a lecturer at the University of Westminster in London and owns a digital fabrication laboratory called the FabPub. Mamou-Mani has given speeches including the TEDx conference in the United States, the Develop3D Live Conference and the Taipei Technical University in Taiwan. His work was featured at the Process Exhibition in Shanghai and at the Sto Werkstatt in London. He currently lives in London.
He studied at the École nationale supérieure d'architecture de Paris-Malaquais and in London, in 2003, at the Architectural Association School of Architecture. He then worked at Zaha Hadid Architects, Ateliers Jean Nouvel and Proctor and Matthews Architects for three years. In 2011, he started teaching Diploma Studio 10 at the university of Westminster with Toby Burgess. To allow their students to share their ideas, they both created the online platform WeWantToLearn.net receiving 600,000 views since its creation. Arthur also founded his practice Mamou-Mani ltd in 2011. The projects include the Magic Garden for Karen Millen and the 3D Pop-Up Studio for the Xintiandi shopping mall in Shanghai, one of the first component-based, fully 3D Printed pavilion Another pop-up project is "The Fitting Room" designed in collaboration with James K. Cheung of ARUP Associates a large origami tree made of 500 laser-cut polypropylene folded pieces. In March 2016, he participates with Maggie Aderin-Pocock, Toby Burgess, Linda Aitken and Els Leclerq, to a Samsung report that explores such questions as "How will we live; how will we work; how will we relax?".
In 2018, he built Galaxia, Burning Man 3D printed temple. He is the first non-US architect selected for this piece of art.
In 2019, he designed Conifera, a 3D-printed bioplastic installation for COS, during Milan design week, in the 16th-century Palazzo Isimbardi.

Awards