Pardo's work has always dealt with the intersection of sculpture, architecture and construction. Regarding his work, Pardo has stated "What I do is shape space and play with history that forms people's sense of expectation." blurring the lines between art and function; "a house that is also a sculpture". The single story, bent C-shaped redwood structure was completed in 1998, when it opened to the public as a temporary satellite space to MoCA. The house is situated on a steep hillside in Mount Washington, Los Angeles. Structurally, the house is windowless toward Sea View Lane but offers semicircular views of a lush interior garden as well as a view of the Pacific Ocean, weather-permitting, from the dining room. Pardo designed every element in the building - the lamps, furniture, tiles and garden landscaping.
Project (2000-2001) Pardo was commissioned to create an art work for the
Dia Art Foundation at 548 W 22nd Street in Chelsea, New York in 2000. His resulting work,
Project, functioned in three ways: to redesign the museum lobby, to create a substantial bookshop, and to propose an exhibition for the first-floor gallery, a traditional white cube space. The installation included wardrobe furniture for a patient's room by designer
Alvar Aalto, side tables by designer
Marcel Breuer, high stools by designer
Jasper Morrison, and a full-scale model of a 1994
Volkswagen New Beetle. Pardo preferred to work incrementally, improvising with an agreed-upon framework as the project progressed. The exhibition brochure states: "Eschewing finite edges, erasing borders both literal and metaphorical,
Project problematizes the interface between art, architecture, and design." '''
Reyes House (2005)''' In 2005, Pardo was commissioned to design a house for art collectors César and Mima Reyes in
Naguabo, Puerto Rico. Fashioned after
4166 Sea View Lane, the house was designed to take advantage of the location by making the space open to the surrounding Caribbean views. Pardo incorporated concrete, bright orange metal screens, colorful tiling, and a kitchen collaboratively designed with the Reyes themselves. Reyes said of Pardo, "Jorge has an incredible sense of space. Some people have a perfect ear for music; he has perfect spatial intelligence." '''
Tecoh (2007)'''
Madrazo Tecoh Project saw Pardo renovate a ruined estate an hour out of
Mérida, Mexico. The site was originally a farm and factory for manufacturing sisal twine, reaching its apex of productivity in the 1920s and '30s. The estate gradually went into disrepair in the postwar years, following the introduction of synthetic fibers. The catalogue for this project consisted of a book of photographs of the site, where Pardo superimposed glowing color fields. ==Exhibitions==