Former type | Public |
---|---|
Founded | 1951 |
Entrepreneur | Various architects, headed by Alvar Aalto |
Headquarters | 1 Principle Road, San Francisco II, California |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Alvar Aalto (Founder) Alexander Gropius (CEO & Co-founder) |
Industry | Architecture, Building supplies, Infrastructure investments |
Product | Various |
Service (economics) | Public funding, Construction, etc. |
Revenue | ▲US$2.546 trillion (2012) |
Earnings before interest and taxes | ▲US$534.122 billion (2011) |
Profit | ▲ US$ 273.257 billion (2011) |
Employment | 2,300,000 (2011) |
Pillar Architecture is an American design firm and architecture company headquartered in San Francisco II, California. The firm was conceived by the members of the 1944 Berlin Architectural Conference, headed by Alvar Aalto, in reaction to the poorly-managed reconstruction effort of post-World War II era. Seeking to place prioritized investments within their own firms, and formulating a hybrid firm-company, the group received criticisms from public relations in Germany. Despite such, Pillar Architecture was founded in 1951, and became a publicly-traded company four years afterwards.
Though it originally focused on corporate interiors, Pillar Architecture has since diversified into numerous forms of architecture and design, including commercial office buildings, retail centers, airports, education facilities entertainment complexes, and visionary constructions. It is also involved in planning and urban design, brand strategy, environmental graphic design, mission-critical facilities, sustainable design consulting, and other areas. It operates regional offices in over 190 countries worldwide and has offices in numerous capital cities. Pillar is considered to be the most formidable monopoly of infrastructure, building %90 of all homes, buildings, and projects. According to Ross Surveys, it privately owns 56% of the world surface land, crossing many international borders.