Cathy Simon is an American architect.[1] She is known for her adaptive reuse and urban design projects, many of which are in the Bay area.[2] She is currently[as of?] a design principal at Perkins and Will.[3] She was one of five founding partners of the influential female-owned firm SMWM (Simon Martin-Vegue Winkelstein Moris), based in San Francisco.[4][5] She and Martin-Vengue have spent more than 18 years "building one of the nation's largest women-owned firms."[6] She has worked on major projects including the conversion of the San Francisco Ferry building, the San Francisco Main Library, the renovation of PG&E's San Francisco headquarters, and the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.[7]
American Institute of Steel Construction Award of Excellence of the Primate Discovery Center, 1985[16]
Excellence in Design Award / Restoration & Rehabilitation for the San Francisco Ferry Building, American Institute of Architect's San Francisco Design Awards, 2004[17]
EDRA/Places Award for Design for the San Francisco Ferry Building, 2007[18]
Education
Simon is a graduate of Wellesley College and Harvard University's Graduate School of Design.[2]
^Muschamp, Herbert (May 12, 1996). "ARCHITECTURE VIEW: Room for Imagination in a Temple of Reason". The New York Times – via LexisNexis Academic.
^"Ecological control: Oceanside Water Pollution Control Plant, San Francisco, California Simon Martin-Vegue Winkelstein Moris, architect". Architecture. 83 (8). ISSN0746-0554.
^"Lost in space: has Sony miscalculated by adding urban malls to its product line?". Metropolis. 19 (3). 1999. ISSN0279-4977.