Frank Gehry | Royal Architectural Institute of Canada

 

Frank Gehry

February 28, 1929 - December 5, 2025

Frank Gehry, CC, Hon. FRAIC

The Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) joins the global architectural community in mourning the passing of Frank O. Gehry, CC, Hon. FRAIC, who died on December 5, 2025, at his home in Santa Monica, California, at the age of 96, following a brief respiratory illness. 

Born Frank Owen Goldberg in Toronto in 1929, Gehry began his life and education in Canada before moving to the United States and building one of the most influential careers in contemporary architecture. His projects—including the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris, and the Art Gallery of Ontario transformation in Toronto—reshaped skylines, reframed public expectations of architecture, and demonstrated how bold form and material innovation can captivate communities and transform cities. 

Gehry’s connection to the RAIC community is deep and enduring. In 1998, he was named an Honorary Fellow of the RAIC College of Fellows, recognizing his outstanding contribution to the advancement of architecture and his impact on the profession in Canada and around the world.  

In the same year, the RAIC awarded Gehry the RAIC Gold Medal, the Institute’s highest honour, bringing him “home” to a Canadian audience of architects, students, educators, and allied professionals who had followed his trajectory from emerging practitioner to global cultural figure. That recognition reflected not only his iconic buildings, but also his willingness to experiment, to take risks, and to expand the language of architecture—qualities that continue to inspire generations of Canadian architects. 

In 2002, he was appointed a Companion of the Order of Canada—our country’s highest civilian honour—further underlining the national significance of his work and his continuing ties to his country of birth. 

For RAIC members and the broader Canadian design community, Gehry’s legacy is felt in several ways: 

  • A Canadian pioneer on the world stage. As a Toronto-born architect who became a global figure, Gehry showed Canadian practitioners and students that it is possible to maintain deep roots in Canada while working at an international scale. His transformation of the Art Gallery of Ontario in collaboration with Toronto architect partners remains a touchstone for many Canadian architects and clients alike. 

  • An advocate for experimentation and craft. Gehry was known for his willingness to test new tools and methods—from the use of CATIA and advanced digital modelling to unconventional materials and expressive structural systems—while remaining intensely committed to the craft of building. His approach opened doors for Canadian firms exploring digital design, fabrication, and new forms of collaboration with engineers, fabricators, and builders. 

  • A teacher and mentor. Through decades of teaching at institutions such as Yale, USC, Harvard, and others, Gehry influenced generations of architects, including many Canadians who studied under him or encountered his work in studios and critiques. His example continues to inform RAIC members who teach, mentor interns, and support emerging practitioners across the country. 

  • A reminder of architecture’s public role. Projects like Guggenheim Bilbao and Walt Disney Concert Hall demonstrated how architecture can catalyze urban renewal, anchor cultural life, and capture the public imagination. For the RAIC community, these projects reinforce the Institute’s long-standing message: that design excellence is not a luxury, but a critical public good that shapes civic identity, economic vitality, and social connection. 

Frank Gehry’s passing is a profound loss for the global architectural community, for Canada, and for the RAIC family of members, Fellows, students, and partners who have studied, debated, taught, and been inspired by his work. Yet his legacy is everywhere: in the city skylines he transformed, in the studios and classrooms where his projects are still pored over, and in the practices that continue to push boundaries because he showed that it was possible. 

On behalf of the RAIC, we extend our deepest condolences to his family, friends, colleagues at Gehry Partners, and to the many architects, designers, and students in Canada and around the world whose lives and work were shaped by his example. 

May his memory continue to challenge us—to take risks, to care about how people experience architecture, and to imagine futures for our cities that are as generous, daring, and humane as the best of his work.