Ram Karmi

[3] Early in his career Ram Karmi was employed in his father's office where he worked on plans for the Knesset along with the design competition winner Joseph Klarwein.[3] According to Karmi, after the 1967 Six-Day War, the changed atmosphere in Israeli society caused him to re-think his brutalist style.In 1986 Karmi and his sister Ada Karmi-Melamede were invited to participate in the international competition for the design of the Supreme Court of Israel which they won.[9] The massive Tel Aviv Central Bus Station, which Karmi designed along with the architects Tzvi Komet and Ya'el Rothschild, has been criticized over the years for being a difficult to navigate bloated structure which also destroyed the neighborhood it was built in, despite numerous advertising campaigns and improvements.In an interview, Haim Avigal, the CEO of the station from 2005, downplayed the navigation complaints, but said that "if I caught the architect who designed this building, I'd beat him up".
The Yad LaYeled Children's Museum
JerusalemTechnionArchitectural Association School of ArchitectureBrutalistHebrewTel AvivDov KarmiIsrael Defense Forces1948 Arab–Israeli WarIsrael PrizeAda Karmi-MelamedeSupreme Court of IsraelKnessetJoseph KlarweinBeershebaTel Aviv Central Bus StationSix-Day WarHousing and Construction Minister of Israelpublic housingHecht SynagoguePaul GoldbergerHabima TheatreColumbia UniversityUniversity of Houstonfull professorAriel University Center of SamariaRechter PrizeGhetto Fighters' HouseIsraeli Ministry of DefenseList of Israel Prize recipientsHaaretzMinistry of Education (Israel)RoutledgeGoldberger, Paul