NORDENSON - Key Persons


Brett Schneider

Job Titles:
  • Senior Associate
is educated as both an architect and an engineer. After earning his bachelor's degree from Williams College, Schneider pursued joint master's degrees in architecture and structural engineering at Princeton University. Schneider is currently an Assistant Professor at the Rhode Island School of Design (Division of Architecture and Design) where he teaches both design studios and structural engineering. He has also taught as a visiting faculty member at Parsons The New School for Design (School of Constructed Environments), the College of Architecture, Art and Planning at Cornell University, and the GSAPP at Columbia University. Recently completed projects include the Menil Drawing Institute in Houston TX, the competition-winning Chicago Horizon pavilion and Day's End sculpture installation at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

David Himelman

Job Titles:
  • Senior Associate
joined the firm in December of 2015. He holds a Bachelor of Arts from Vassar College (2011) and an Master of Architecture from Harvard University Graduate School of Design (2015). He has worked in several architecture firms including Leong Leong, where he worked on the concept design for a 150-room hotel in San Francisco CA, Johnston Marklee Associates and Interboro Partners, gaining experience as an architectural designer and working on a wide range of project types. His recently completed projects include the Moody Amphitheater at Waterloo Greenway in Austin TX. Current projects include MSGR Residential Annex at the US Embassy in Paris FRANCE and the International African American Museum in Charleston SC.

Gina Morrow

Job Titles:
  • Associate
  • Partner
joined the firm in the fall of 2015. She holds a BA from Vassar College (2011) and an MArch from Princeton University School of Architecture (2015). She is adjunct faculty at The Cooper Union where she teaches a course in structural drawing with GNA colleague Xiaoxiao Wu. In the past she has also taught at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Before graduate school, Gina worked as an editorial assistant at Princeton Architectural Press. Her recently completed projects include David Hammons' 325 foot Day's End sculpture installation at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Currently she is working on a house in Austin TX and the Rothko Chapel Campus Expansion in Houston TX.

Guy Nordenson

Job Titles:
  • Partner
is a practicing structural engineer and professor of architecture and structural engineering at Princeton University. He studied at MIT and the University of California at Berkeley and began his career as a drafter in the joint Long Island City studio of R Buckminster Fuller and Isamu Noguchi in 1976. From 1978, he practiced structural engineering in San Francisco and New York. In 1987, he established the New York office of Ove Arup & Partners and was a director until 1997 when he opened his independent practice. Nordenson was the structural engineer for the Jubilee Church in Rome, Simmons Residence Hall at MIT, Santa Fe Opera House, Toledo Glass Pavilion in OH, National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC and over 200 other projects. Recent projects include the expansion of the Corning Museum of Glass and the Frick Museum in NY, and the Museum of Fine Arts expansion, Glassell School of Art, Rice Moody Center, and Menil Drawing Institute all in Houston TX. In New York he also oversaw the design and installation of David Hammons' Days End sculpture in the Hudson River. He has had a decades' long relationship with the MoMA as curator, member of the acquisitions committee and as the structural engineering of the 2004 MoMA expansion. His drawings and working models have also been included in the collection and MoMA has published Tall Buildings (2004), Seven Structural Engineers, the Felix Candela Lectures in Structural Engineering (2008) and Structured Lineages: Learning from Japanese Structural Design (2019). The AIA sponsored research project "On the Water | Palisade Bay" (Hatje Cantz 2010) served as the inspiration and background research for the 2010 MoMA workshop and exhibition "Rising Currents" organized by Barry Bergdoll.