Edgar Gonzalez and C茅cile Brisac were already working day and night 鈥 so how did the couple cope when they won an international competition to design a 拢20m museum in Sweden?
It is what young architects dream of 鈥 winning an anonymous design competition that catapults them on to the world stage. For C茅cile Brisac, 30, and Edgar Gonzalez, 36, the dream came true earlier this summer, when the London-based couple beat entries from such illustrious competitors as David Chipperfield, Shin Takamatsu and Itsuko Hasegawa in an open competition to design the 拢20m Museum of World Culture in Gothenburg, Sweden.

The pair were doing freelance work for architect Kohn Pedersen Fox when the news came through on Brisac鈥檚 mobile phone. 鈥淭he first thing you want to do is jump and scream,鈥 says Gonzalez. 鈥淏ut we were in another architect鈥檚 office, so we couldn鈥檛. We had to keep quiet until the official press announcement two weeks later.鈥 Brisac adds: 鈥淲e still haven鈥檛 celebrated, because the project started immediately.鈥 The jury for the competition, which picked Brisac Gonzalez Architecture鈥檚 design out of 227 entrants, said it was 鈥渓ike a large sculpture, or a rock thrown by a giant鈥.

The practice, now eight-strong, moved into offices in Soho鈥檚 Poland Street last month. Since then, it has been all systems go. Brisac is loath to interrupt a brainstorming session with structural engineer YRM Anthony Hunt Associates to keep an appointment with 黑洞社区, and reschedules the interview. The next day, Gonzalez explains: 鈥淚 thought it was going to be a two-hour meeting but we spent seven hours talking. A series of problems, through talking to [YRM Anthony Hunt director] Les Postawa, just became beautiful solutions. It was invigorating.鈥 This fervent dedication to the job is no doubt instrumental to the success of the practice. The married couple live and breathe architecture. Since setting up practice in 1995, they have worked on seven competition submissions by night while freelancing by day, Brisac for Ian Ritchie Architects, Gonzalez for Rick Mather Architects and both for Kohn Pedersen Fox.

鈥淵ou develop a pretty intense work ethic, working half the day for someone else and the rest of the day and half the night for yourself,鈥 says Brisac. 鈥淣ow that we are working all day and half the night for ourselves, we can鈥檛 complain. It鈥檚 what you strive for.鈥 Do they drive each other mad, living and working in such close proximity? 鈥淲e drive each other up the wall whether we are working or not,鈥 jokes Gonzalez. Brisac says: 鈥淲e are both very demanding. So, we disagree, then we discuss and things move forward.鈥 The pair met in London in 1988 when Frenchwoman Brisac was studying at the Architecture Association. Cuban-born US citizen Gonzalez, who had learned his trade at the University of Florida and New York鈥檚 Columbia University, stayed in London to be with Brisac. And why did she stay? 鈥淪he hated French food,鈥 quips Gonzalez.

Gonzalez worked for Zaha Hadid from 1988 to 1990, then again in 1993, on projects including the second-stage entry for the notorious Cardiff Bay Opera House competition. 鈥淚t was a fantastic learning experience,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here is no other place where I have worked where it is as intense. Her office is a bit like a laboratory where things are constantly being tested. And it shows 鈥 her work is rich and it comes out of a hard process. It does not fall out of the sky.鈥 Between 1990 and 1992, the pair worked in Paris, Brisac for Franc Hammout猫ne and Gonzalez for Agence Jean Michel Wilmotte.

You develop a pretty intense work ethic, working half the day for someone else and the rest for yourself. Now that we are working for ourselves, we can鈥檛 complain

After Brisac graduated from the AA in 1995, they formed Brisac Gonzalez Architecture. While freelancing, they won a competition run by Europan, a European Union body with the aims of promoting young architects and regenerating brownfield sites across Europe. Although Brisac Gonzalez鈥檚 design, a 20 000 m2 mixed-use scheme for a contaminated site outside Z眉rich, was not built, the practice subsequently won two feasibility studies for mixed-use schemes in Switzerland. The pair spent a year in Florida in 1996 鈥 Gonzalez as visiting professor of architecture at Florida International University and Brisac remodelling a 2000 m2 art deco Palm Beach mansion. But the Museum of World Culture is going to keep them in London for the foreseeable future.

It will be built on a steep hillside opposite Sweden鈥檚 most visited tourist attraction, the Liseburg Amusement Park. Brisac says that the main challenge was to place the building within its compact site. 鈥淭he typical diagram of a building on a hill looks down, but that would face a street of uninteresting buildings. So, we turned the idea around. We pushed the mass of the building, including the galleries that don鈥檛 require daylight, to the street edge and ended up with the atrium and spaces for cultural activities looking up the hill, into the wooded landscape.

鈥淭hat way, the museum reveals itself to the visitors to the amusement park at the top of the hill. It鈥檚 designed to be open and inclusive,鈥 adds Gonzalez. It will house an auditorium, research centre, library and restaurant, and will be a forum for international and local events.

Personal effects

What book are you reading? Brisac: Timbuktu by Paul Auster. Gonzalez: El Libro de las Ciudades by Guillermo Cabrera Infante. What is your favourite building? Gonzalez: Mies van der Rohe鈥檚 National Gallery in Berlin. Brisac: Haven鈥檛 got one favourite building. What do you do to relax? Gonzalez: I鈥檓 pretty relaxed. I go skin diving in the Bahamas for 10 days a year. Brisac: And I lie on the boat deck, doing nothing. What car do you drive? Gonzalez: The Central Line. What is your favourite film? Brisac: A Touch of Evil by Orson Welles. Gonzalez: Alfred Hitchcock鈥檚 North by Northwest 鈥 a very architectural movie. Which architects do you admire? Brisac: Architects who know how to re-invent themselves, such as Jean Nouvel, Rem Koolhaas and Gordon Bunschaft. Gonzalez: Wallace Harrison.