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Low-cost housing pioneer Balkrishna Doshi is first Indian architect to win prestigious Pritzker Prize

Doshi, 90, is one of the last living apprentices of modernist guru Le Corbusier

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Balkrishna Doshi, centre in blue, winner of the 2018 Pritzker Architecture Prize, celebrates the announcement with his family members at his home in Ahmadabad, India, on Wednesday. Photo: AP
Agence France-Presse

Indian architect Balkrishna Doshi, a pioneer of low-cost housing design, won the prestigious Pritzker Prize on Wednesday, considered architecture’s Nobel equivalent.

The 90-year-old Doshi – one of the last living architects to have apprenticed with the Franco-Swiss trailblazer Le Corbusier – distinguished his work by committing to sustainable architecture and inexpensive housing, bringing modernist design to an India rooted in traditionalism.

He is the 45th Pritzker laureate and the first from India.

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“Balkrishna Doshi has always created an architecture that is serious, never flashy or a follower of trends,” said the Pritzker jury, which said Doshi “has continually exhibited the objectives” of architecture’s highest honour.

This photo provided by The Pritzker Architecture Prize shows the Aranya low-cost public housing estate by Balkrishna Doshi in Indore, India, which accommodates over 80,000 people through a system of houses, courtyards and internal pathways. Photo: AP
This photo provided by The Pritzker Architecture Prize shows the Aranya low-cost public housing estate by Balkrishna Doshi in Indore, India, which accommodates over 80,000 people through a system of houses, courtyards and internal pathways. Photo: AP
I should take an oath and remember it for my lifetime: to provide the lowest class with the proper dwelling
Balkrishna Doshi
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