Craig is an Associate Principal at Payette in Boston, and brings over thirty years of experience practicing architecture for cultural and institutional clients. Craig specializes in projects relating to science and the arts in higher education. His work consistently addresses complex, carefully designed buildings with a focus on sophisticated façade design and the transformation of historic structures, contexts and cultural landscapes. He is currently leading the design of the Caroline Kimmel Biomedical Research Building at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, and 232 A Street, in Boston. He recently completed 'The 105,' a life science research laboratory for Tishman Speyer/Breakthrough Properties in South Boston.Craig holds a Master of Architecture Degree from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Architecture from the University of Virginia. In 1995, he was awarded the Arthur Rotch Traveling Scholarship and traveled extensively throughout Southeast Asia and Mediterranean Europe. He has been a Visiting Lecturer in Architecture at the University of Virginia, and has served on design juries at numerous universities throughout the United States.Prior to joining Payette, as a principal at Machado Silvetti, he led the North Tower Expansion Project at the Denver Museum of Art, the Vietnamese-German University Campus Project for Binh Duong Province, Ho Chi Minh City, and the new Asian Art Study Center at the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota. Other recent projects include the Global Center for Academic and Spiritual Life at NYU, the Southampton Center, and a Master Plan for the McNay Art Museum, all with Machado Silvetti. He has also led award winning projects at Ennead (formerly the Polshek Partnership), Annum (formerly Ann Beha Associates), Architecture Research Office, BKS/K, and Kennedy & Violich Architecture.
Listed skills include Architecture, Architectural Design, Historic Preservation, Sustainable Design, and 14 others.