Famed Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport terminal architect Helmut Jahn killed in bicycle accident in Chicago
Helmut Jahn killed when two vehicles struck the bicycle he was riding outside Chicago
His work internationally includes the Suvarnabhumi Airport terminal in Bangkok, Thailand
German-born American architect Helmut Jahn, known for his postmodern steel-and-glass structures, has died aged 81 in Illinois after being hit by two vehicles while he was riding his bicycle, police said.
Jahn died on Saturday afternoon in Campton Hills, about 100km (60 miles) west of Chicago, when he “failed to stop at a posted stop sign” at an intersection, according to police on Sunday,
The two vehicles were travelling in opposite directions, police said, adding that Jahn died at the scene and one driver was taken to hospital with minor injuries.
After graduating in Munich in 1965, Jahn moved to Chicago to study at the Illinois Institute of Technology, a school associated with influential Modernist architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
Jahn made his name in the 1970s and 1980s with buildings in Chicago including the controversial Thompson Centre and the United Airlines Terminal at O’Hare International Airport.
He was also involved in the design of the FBI headquarters in Washington, the Suvarnabhumi Airport terminal in Bangkok, Thailand and the Sony Centre in Berlin.
“Jahn was one of the most inventive Chicago architects whose impact on the city … will never be forgotten,” said Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot on Twitter.
“His architectural footprint will be felt & seen across the globe for generations to come.”
Blair Kamin, former architecture critic of the Chicago Tribune, told the paper on Sunday that Jahn was a “dashing star of an architect”.
“His architecture was always exceptional. And, as time went on, he was regarded as less of a ‘Flash Gordon’ character and more of a modernist master.”
Additional reporting by Associated Press
Source: https://www.scmp.com/news/world/united-states-canada/article/3132860/famed-bangkok-airport-architect-helmut-jahn-killed