Charles-Gustave Stoskopf (2 September 1907 – 22 January 2004) was a French architect.
[1][2] His father, Gustave Stoskopf,[2] was a polymath: poet, painter, playwright and publisher.
[2] He graduated from the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, where his professors included Emmanuel Pontremoli and Jacques Debat-Ponsan.
[4] In the aftermath of World War II, Stoskopf began designing new buildings demolished by the war in the villages of Alsace,[5] especially near Colmar, and in the Territoire de Belfort.
[2] Meanwhile, from 1954 to 1970, he designed housing estates like Colmar's ZUP, Créteil's Mont-Mesly,[6] or Strasbourg's Canardière, Esplanade and Quai des Belges.