In 2002, he was listed by
Surface magazine as one of the top ten avant-garde designers. In 2002 he received the "Nouveaux albums des jeunes architectes français" award from the
French Ministry for Culture, and the
New York Young Architects award from the
Architectural League of New York. In 2004, he received the
Rome Prize from the
French Academy in Rome (
Villa Medicis). Serero is an adjunct professor at the École d'Architecture Malaquais in Paris, where his research focuses on matters of structural morphology and the performance of building envelopes. He also lectured at New York
Pratt Institute and at
Columbia University and on architectural design studios and workshops in the USA, in France, Italy and Austria. In 2000, Serero founded Serero Architects in New York. == Notable projects ==