Andy Waisler
Andy Waisler is an American architectural designer whose work includes production and post-production environments for the entertainment industry.[1][2][3][4][5]
Career
Animation and Visual Effects
In the mid-1990s, Waisler co-founded the computer-animation studio PropellerHead Design with filmmakers J. J. Abrams and Rob Letterman.[6]< The company produced animated content for HBO and was later contracted by DreamWorks Animation to help develop the original digital pipeline for Shrek, creating an early animation test featuring the voice of Chris Farley in the title role, known as Shrek – I Feel Good Animation Test.[6]
Nicole LaPorte’s 2010 book The Men Who Would Be King: An Almost Epic Tale of Moguls, Movies, and a Company Called DreamWorks documents DreamWorks’ collaboration with the PropellerHead team, Abrams, Letterman, Loren Soman, and Waisler, during the film’s early development. LaPorte writes that Katzenberg hired the group to experiment with 3-D motion-capture animation and quotes Waisler recalling the period as “sort of a miracle time,” noting that “CGI was being invented every time anyone did anything.”[7]
Before turning to architecture, Waisler worked in visual effects and motion graphics for film and television. His credits include How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000), The Time Machine (2002), Star Trek: Nemesis (2002), I, Robot (2004), and The Day After Tomorrow (2004), Cinderella Man (2005), and, Aeon Flux (2005). He also designed the title sequence for Felicity (1998).[8]
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Architecture
Before founding his own studio, Waisler collaborated with architect Neil Denari on a series of digitally modeled residential projects, including the Massey House (also known as the Schnitt Haus, 1994–1996) and the Vertical Smoothhouse (1997).[9] The Massey Residence was an early example of photo realistic computer-aided visualization in architecture, representing one of the first digitally modeled residential projects to gain international recognition. Prints of the project are held in the Frac Centre-Val de Loire collection in Orléans, France.[10] The project was also featured in The Un-Private House, a 1999 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) curated by Terence Riley, situating it among key works that explored new forms of domestic space in the digital era.[11]
Waisler's own practice currently focuses on production and post-production environments for the entertainment industry. Waisler designed the headquarters of Bad Robot in Santa Monica, completed with Shimoda Design Group.[12] The project was widely covered for its reinterpretation of a light-industrial building as a creative workspace. Interior Design magazine’s 2010 feature *“Double Feature: Joey Shimoda and Andy Waisler Turn Two Santa Monica Buildings into a Film Studio”* profiled the Bad Robot design as an adaptive reuse of two industrial structures into a film-studio campus, noting it's *“cinematic approach to space and light”* and the seamless integration of creative culture and workspace.[13] In Fast Company, journalist K. C. Ifeanyi called it *“the coolest office in Hollywood ever,”* describing its informal communal spaces and workshop-like character.[14]
In a 2012 public talk at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab, Abrams discussed his collaboration with Waisler on the Bad Robot headquarters, describing him as “a passionate and wonderful architect.” Abrams recalled that Waisler asked him to make “a list of all the things you want the place to be, not just technically … but in terms of emotion and feeling,” adding that after the building was complete “he had done all of them.” Abrams added "You know, to go to work on something about design, but be met by someone saying, "I want you to listen to this piece of music."…, it's the greatest, because suddenly you’re feeling something, and that feeling then gets translated into the work in an unexpected way"[15]
Subsequent adaptive-reuse projects include an animation-studio conversion in Santa Monica with Gwynne Pugh Urban Studio, featured in ArchDaily, World-Architects, and Inhabitat.[16][17][18] He has also collaborated with HLW International, Loescher Meachem Architects, and Shimoda Design Group on facilities for Illumination Entertainment, Skydance Media, Annapurna Pictures, and Mark Gordon Productions.[19][20][21]
In a 2017 interview on the CG Garage Podcast, Waisler discussed the intersection of digital visualization and architecture, noting how his background in production continues to inform his design process.[22] His work has been described as blending “the narrative sensibility of film production with the permanence of architecture.”[13][14]
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Notable works
- Bad Robot (with Shimoda Design Group)[12]
- Annapurna Pictures[23]
- Illumination Entertainment (with Loescher Meachem Architects)[24]
- Skydance Media (with HLW International)[19][20][21]
Education
Waisler earned a Bachelor’s degree in liberal arts and spent his junior year at an art school, where he studied furniture and industrial design. He completed a Master of Architecture at the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc). During graduate school, he studied in Japan.[22]
References
- ↑ "Double Feature: Joey Shimoda and Andy Waisler Turn Two Santa Monica Buildings into a Film Studio". Interior Design. May 2010.
- ↑ "National Typewriter Company". i+s (Interiors + Sources). June 2019.
- ↑ Ifeanyi, K. C. (April 8 2019). "Inside the Coolest Office in Hollywood Ever". Fast Company. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ "Santa Monica Animation Studio / Gwynne Pugh Urban Studio". ArchDaily. February 20 2013. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ "Santa Monica Animation Studio". World-Architects.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "J. J. Abrams". Whizzbang1698. June 27 2021. Retrieved 2025-09-06. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ LaPorte, Nicole (2010). The Men Who Would Be King: An Almost Epic Tale of Moguls, Movies, and a Company Called DreamWorks. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 56–59. ISBN 978-0-547-15240-1 Check
|isbn=value: checksum (help).In late 1994 when he’d first met with the Propellerheads—J. J. Abrams, Rob Letterman, Loren Soman, and Andy Waisler—Katzenberg explained that Shrek was the studio’s “low-budget” project … According to Waisler, they would “stare into the computer for eighteen hours straight without getting up, and realize we’d gotten nothing done.” Looking back, Waisler remarked, “Things were swelling at the time … CGI was being invented every time anyone did anything.”
Search this book on
- ↑ "Felicity". Felicity. Season 1. September 29 1998. The WB. Check date values in:
|=(help) - ↑ "1982 Archive – Neil M. Denari Architects". NMDA. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
- ↑ "Neil Denari – Massey Residence". FRAC Centre-Val de Loire. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
- ↑ Riley, Terence (1999). The Un-Private House. New York: Museum of Modern Art. pp. 136–139, 145. ISBN 0870700945 Check
|isbn=value: checksum (help). Search this book on
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 "Bad Robot HQ". Interior Design. 2015. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 "Double Feature: Joey Shimoda and Andy Waisler Turn Two Santa Monica Buildings into a Film Studio". Interior Design. May 2010. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Ifeanyi, K. C. (April 8 2019). "Inside the Coolest Office in Hollywood Ever". Fast Company. Retrieved 2025-09-06. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ "J. J. Abrams at MIT Media Lab". MIT Media Lab. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. November 27 2012. Event occurs at 59:16. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
You know, the guy who designed our building for Bad Robot, his name is Andy Waisler … he’s such a passionate and wonderful architect … when we first started working on the design of it we had these two separate buildings we were putting together, he said, “Make a list of all the things you want the place to be, not just technically, and not just sort of you know, in terms of design, but in terms of emotion and feeling.” … And what was amazing was, three years later after the building was done, he showed me that list, and he had done all of them.
Check date values in:|date=(help) - ↑ "Santa Monica Animation Studio / Gwynne Pugh Urban Studio". ArchDaily. February 20 2013. Retrieved 2025-09-06. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ "Santa Monica Animation Studio". World-Architects. 2013. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
- ↑ "Gwynne Pugh Urban Studio Turns an Old Santa Monica Warehouse into a New Animation Studio". Inhabitat. 2013. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 "Request to Approve Plans to Restore and Rehabilitate the Historic Interior Lobby of the Former United States Post Office (PDF)". City of Santa Monica. March 7 2017. Retrieved 2025-09-06. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ 20.0 20.1 "Commission Denies, Then Approves Santa Monica Post Office Conversion". The Lookout. April 25 2016. Retrieved 2025-09-06. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ 21.0 21.1 "Conservancy News Feed: Skydance Hires Preservation Architect". Santa Monica Conservancy. 2017. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 "CG Garage Podcast #85 – Andy Waisler" (Podcast). Chaos Group Labs. 2017. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
- ↑ "Annapurna Pictures project". LMA Architects. May 28 2020. Retrieved 2025-09-06. Check date values in:
|date=(help) - ↑ "Illumination Entertainment". ITS Design Group. Retrieved 2025-09-06.
External links
- Andy Waisler on IMDb
- Interior Design – Double Feature article
- FRAC Centre-Val de Loire – Massey Residence collection
- MoMA – The Un-Private House exhibition catalogue
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