Ramy Issac New York City’s Premiere Architect

Ramy Issac has evolved an architecture practice that has primarily focused on understanding the needs of its clients and has implemented design solutions to harmonize the relationships between aesthetic and buildings purpose. Ramy Issac has built a strong reputation for design that he and his firm approach each of their projects with a unique creative lens that allows for the clients’ vision to shine through.

Ramy Issac has been the innovative and leading architect in New York City. Since the establishment of his firm Issac & Stern, he has gone on to create a unique and refined work that is a feat of modern design in his buildings across Manhattan, Chelsea, Brooklyn, and Queens. He has had his hand in designing a plethora of buildings, both commercial and residential. Including, but not limited to, synagogues, churches, penthouses, clubs, restaurants, apartments, and community centers.

Ramy Issac utilizes an intensive design process that results in a thoughtful and dynamic approach to his designs. Ramy Issac’s extensive knowledge of design and art has been a constant inspiration to his work. Growing up in Israel, he studied architecture at Technion in Haifa. He went on to immigrate to New York City to enroll at the Pratt Institute to complete his master’s degree in architecture.

Ramy Issac has gone on to design and renovate buildings with his original designs and has been apart of completing significant projects throughout the city. Like working on the Saatchi and Saatchi building at 375 Hudson Street in Manhattan.

Ramy Issac attributes his influence of architecture, all from the passion and love he holds for art. As a child, Ramy Issac’s passion for art is what sparked the interest in architecture. Art was a way for Ramy Issac to express the ideas of his vivid imagination. He spent most of his childhood and teen years sketching and painting and went on to win several awards for his artwork while he was living in Israel.

When Ramy Issac isn’t designing feats of architectural magnificence across the New York Metropolitan area, he is still painting and sketching in his free time. Much of his artwork can be seen hanging on the walls of his office.


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