Ali Tayar Archive
Ali Tayar, who ran a New York-based architecture firm until his death, created some of the world’s most beautiful interiors, layering luxurious details onto standardized, Erector-set-like parts. He completed projects for the likes of USM and Michael Maharam of Maharam; what the two companies had in common, he said, was that they had been doing one thing well for generations. An affinity for high standards—and for those who followed them—pervaded Tayar’s work. Born in Turkey and educated in Europe (and later at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Tayar was old-school, a gentleman at home in myriad languages and cultures, with a distaste for anything trendy, flimsy, or ostentatious.
But Tayar was hardly backward-looking. He was fascinated by the 
idea of mass production, which for much of the 20th century promised to 
revolutionize design. Though his own projects were one-offs, tailored to
 the needs of loyal and discerning clients, he focused on 
standardization, he said, as a way of editing his work. In an era where 
every “nutty” shape was possible, Tayar said, he searched for and 
depended on limiting principles.
His projects included a hotel in Bern, Switzerland,
 and another in Zermatt, where his “kit” of metal and plywood parts 
formed an extraordinarily luxurious backdrop for another Tayar passion, 
Danish modern furniture, and a house near Bern with a carbon-fiber living room.
 “There’s no difference between structure and surface,” Tayar said of 
how the room was made. “It’s like the hull of a boat.” The room, reduced
 in size, could have passed through an airport metal 
detector; Tayar liked challenging himself by thinking up rules, then 
sticking to them. His approach could be expensive, but it was the 
opposite of excessive. He was a researcher as much as a designer.
Ellen Levy, a friend and a repeat client, remembers that he was 
never separated from his sketchbook. “He drew exquisitely,” she says, in
 a quest to find ways that standardization could give rise to beauty. 
“On the one hand, he was so rational, wedded to engineering principal. 
On the other hand, he was so poetic. He thought like an artist. This mix
 of poetry and rationalism gave his work a great lightness of spirit.” 
Born in Istanbul in 1959, Tayar studied architecture at the 
University of Stuttgart and at MIT. In 1993, he began practicing in New 
York, where he quickly became known as the designer of homes and 
commercial spaces (including Pop Burger and Pop Pizza locations) and for
 the furniture and storage systems he devised for them. His work found 
its way into shows at the Museum of Modern Art and the Cooper Hewitt 
Smithsonian Design Museum.
In 2002, he was chosen as one of the Emerging Voices of the 
Architectural League of New York. He gave a talk about Fritz Haller, the
 Swiss architect known for factory-made buildings and the 
beloved USM Haller storage system. Tayar described Haller as an 
important link between Jean Prouvé (the prewar proponent of 
mass-produced buildings) and the later “high-tech” architects Richard 
Rogers, Renzo Piano, and Norman Foster. A USM employee heard the talk, 
and soon Tayar was on a plane to Switzerland to meet the company’s 
executives. They hired him to design a line of tables as well as 
the Omnia hotel in Zermatt. USM’s president also had Tayar design 
several residences, even fabricating Tayar-designed components 
in USM factories. The president was, Tayar said, “open to the idea of 
systems like no client was ever going to be. It was a bit like answered 
prayers.”
Tayar was philosophical about the gap between what mass 
production could have achieved (affordable housing for millions) and his
 one-of-a-kind creations. But he believed the ideas he developed for his
 clients might someday find wide application. “After architects have 
made every nutty shape,” he said, “they’re going to want to start to 
edit.” And when they do, they may take a close look at how Tayar’s ways 
of editing produced such spectacular results. (Source [accessed 23 May 2017]: http://www.interiordesign.net/articles/11585-ali-tayar-new-york-based-architect-and-designer-dies-at-57/, written by Fred A. Bernstein)
At the behest of his estate, Ali Tayar's papers were donated to the Aga Khan Documentation Center at MIT.  Selections from the Ali Tayar Archive are included here, with more 
to come. The entire archive is available to students, faculty, 
researchers, and scholars at the Aga Khan Documentation Center.