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Editor's Choice5 Pros of Working Abroad in China
Hamersley Road Residence / Studio53
Architects: Studio53
Location: Subiaco WA 6008, Australia
Year: 2013
Photographs: Christian Sprogoe, Chris Maher
Location: Subiaco WA 6008, Australia
Year: 2013
Photographs: Christian Sprogoe, Chris Maher
VOIDWALL / AND
Architects: AND
Location: Sokcho-si, Gangwon-do, South Korea
Area: 136 sqm
Photographs: Kyungsub Shin
Location: Sokcho-si, Gangwon-do, South Korea
Area: 136 sqm
Photographs: Kyungsub Shin
Terra Remota Winery / Untaller
Architects: Untaller
Location: Carrer Empordà, Girona, Spain
Architects In Charge: Nacho Ferrer Orenga, Pepe Cortes
Year: 2008
Photographs: Lluís Casals
Location: Carrer Empordà, Girona, Spain
Architects In Charge: Nacho Ferrer Orenga, Pepe Cortes
Year: 2008
Photographs: Lluís Casals
Pitulka Eatery / Triopton Architects
Architects: Triopton Architects
Location: Athens, Greece
Design Team: Hysolli Edis, Sergios Eleftherios, Vourliotis Dimitrios
Area: 62 sqm
Year: 2014
Photographs: Dimitris Kleanthis
Location: Athens, Greece
Design Team: Hysolli Edis, Sergios Eleftherios, Vourliotis Dimitrios
Area: 62 sqm
Year: 2014
Photographs: Dimitris Kleanthis
Latest Issue of ArchitectureBoston Devoted Entirely To Architecture & Design Books
This summer, ArchitectureBoston gives readers a reason to linger in their hammocks a little longer and drift away into the world of architecture and design. The new issue contains extensive and insightful suggestions for book lovers looking to build a personal library of new and important titles. Read on for more information.New Images Leaked of Zaha Hadid’s Luxury NYC Apartment Complex
New images have been leaked of the inside of Zaha Hadid’s New York City luxury apartment complex, set to be built alongside the second section of the High Line at 520 West 28th Street.
The renderings, first published by Curbed, show the layout of a typical kitchen and master bath in this 11-story sculpted glass and steel apartment. While the kitchen rendering features a curvy island and faucet in the middle, the bathroom appears to have textured walls.
The renderings, first published by Curbed, show the layout of a typical kitchen and master bath in this 11-story sculpted glass and steel apartment. While the kitchen rendering features a curvy island and faucet in the middle, the bathroom appears to have textured walls.
Why Should You Register A .archi Domain?
The time has come for architects, across the globe, to register for their .archi domain
names. This year has seen the launch of a entirely new range of domains
which explicitly indicate the field of business a particular domain
name points to; .archi,
the new extension reserved exclusively for architectural bodies, is one
such. Not only will it differentiate architects from other fields but,
perhaps more importantly, will also help internet users find architects
when browsing the web. The development of this domain extension, which
has been supported by the International Union of Architects (UIA), will mean that only academically qualified architects and their affiliates will be able to use .archi.
Paul Andreu, designer of the Shanghai Pudong International Airport and the Taiyuan Archaeological Centre, alongside Corinne Vezzoni, have both pledged their support of the new domain name in an advertising campaign by the regulating body Starting Dot.
Click here to register a .archi domain name or find out more after the break…
Paul Andreu, designer of the Shanghai Pudong International Airport and the Taiyuan Archaeological Centre, alongside Corinne Vezzoni, have both pledged their support of the new domain name in an advertising campaign by the regulating body Starting Dot.
Click here to register a .archi domain name or find out more after the break…
New Beach Huts / Pedder & Scampton
Architects: Pedder & Scampton
Location: East Beach Park, Southend-on-Sea, UK
Architect In Charge: Helen Pedder & Gillian Scampton
Year: 2013
Photographs: Simon Kennedy, Courtesy of Pedder & Scampton
Location: East Beach Park, Southend-on-Sea, UK
Architect In Charge: Helen Pedder & Gillian Scampton
Year: 2013
Photographs: Simon Kennedy, Courtesy of Pedder & Scampton
Inside “Places of Power”: Austria’s Pavilion at the 2014 Venice Biennale
The 20th Century was a time of significant political unrest,
seeing two World Wars and the 70-year rise and fall of a major
superpower, the Soviet Union,
among countless other conflicts. In some ways, “modernity” could be
characterized by the rapid creation and crystallization of huge numbers
of nation states since the outbreak of World War One a hundred years
ago.
Reacting to the theme of “Absorbing Modernity“ set for the national pavilions at this year’s Venice Biennale, the curators of the Austrian pavilion chose to investigate the area where this political unrest most overlaps with architecture: the Parliament Buildings of countries around the world.
Read the curator’s take on the pavilion after the break
Reacting to the theme of “Absorbing Modernity“ set for the national pavilions at this year’s Venice Biennale, the curators of the Austrian pavilion chose to investigate the area where this political unrest most overlaps with architecture: the Parliament Buildings of countries around the world.
Read the curator’s take on the pavilion after the break
Country House Renovation / 2260mm Arquitectes
Architects: 2260mm Arquitectes
Location: Vidular, Cantabria, Spain
Architects In Charge: Manel Casellas, Mar Puig de la Bellacasa
Area: 300 sqm
Year: 2014
Photographs: Lluís Bernat
Location: Vidular, Cantabria, Spain
Architects In Charge: Manel Casellas, Mar Puig de la Bellacasa
Area: 300 sqm
Year: 2014
Photographs: Lluís Bernat
New Images Released of Foster + Partners’ “First and Mission” Towers in San Francisco
New images have been released of Foster + Partners’ and Heller Manus Architects’ design for “First and Mission,” a two tower, two million square foot mixed-use development project in downtown San Francisco.
The project consists of a 605-foot condominium tower — the tallest residential project on the West Coast — and an 850-foot hotel, residential and office tower. Together the two towers will add more than a million square feet of flexible office and commercial space, as well as 650,000 square feet of residential units to the Transbay Area.
View more images and learn more about the design of the “First and Mission” project after the break…
The project consists of a 605-foot condominium tower — the tallest residential project on the West Coast — and an 850-foot hotel, residential and office tower. Together the two towers will add more than a million square feet of flexible office and commercial space, as well as 650,000 square feet of residential units to the Transbay Area.
View more images and learn more about the design of the “First and Mission” project after the break…
City of Santa Monica Parking Structure #6 / Behnisch Architekten + Studio Jantzen
Architects: Behnisch Architekten, Studio Jantzen
Location: Santa Monica, CA, USA
Architects In Charge: Behnisch Architekten, Studio Jantzen, IPD International Parking Design
Area: 2,250 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: David Matthiessen
Location: Santa Monica, CA, USA
Architects In Charge: Behnisch Architekten, Studio Jantzen, IPD International Parking Design
Area: 2,250 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: David Matthiessen
An Interview With Materials And Rapid Prototyping Specialist Krista Ninivaggi
Named the 2014 Designer of The Year by Contract Magazine, Krista Ninivaggi of K & Co is an expert in material innovation. In the following interview, Susan S. Szenasy of Metropolis Magazine asks the young designer about her design process, the materials she uses and more.
Robert A.M. Stern Remembers Charles Moore
Robert A.M. Stern, founder of his eponymous firm and dean of the Yale School of Architecture, remembers his colleague and friend Charles Moore in this article originally published by Metropolis Magazine.
Stern writes about the details most would never know — including what
it was like to be a guest in Moore’s home and his eating habits. Read on
to learn about and their relationship over the years and Stern’s admiration for Moore.
As an architecture student at Yale editing Perspecta 9/10, I first met Charles Moore by telephone and through correspondence. I had come across his amazing early projects in the Italian magazine Casabella,
and was intrigued by what I read about him and his partners —
especially in a provocative essay by Donlyn Lyndon. I got in touch with
Charles and he volunteered that he was interested in writing about
Disneyland for the journal, leading to the publication of his
justifiably famous article, “You Have to Pay for the Public Life,” as
well as a portfolio of projects by his firm Moore, Lyndon, Turnbull,
Whitaker.
Weston Residence / Specht Harpman Architects
Architects: Specht Harpman Architects
Location: Weston, CT, USA
Design Team: Scott Specht, Louise Harpman, Amy Lopez-Cepero
Area: 2,400 sqft
Year: 2013
Photographs: Taggart Sorensen
Location: Weston, CT, USA
Design Team: Scott Specht, Louise Harpman, Amy Lopez-Cepero
Area: 2,400 sqft
Year: 2013
Photographs: Taggart Sorensen
The New York Times Asks: Are “Starchitects” Ruining City Skylines?
The idea of “star architects” or “starchitects” is, if nothing else, polemic. Frank Gehry has expressed his hatred for being labeled with the term, and in 2013 we received a letter from a reader urging us to ban the phrase as it “undermines serious discourse regarding architecture and urbanism.” Now, the “starchitect” debate has reached the opinion section of the New York Times.
Following recent comments by Witold Rybczynski that “starchitects” — often unfamiliar with the cities they are designing for — are designing buildings that don’t fit into their surroundings, the NYT has posed the question: Are superstar architects ruining city skylines? Weighing in on the topic are Allison Arieff, an architecture and design writer for the NYT, Vishaan Chakrabarti, an associate professor at Columbia and a partner at SHoP Architects, Angel Borrego Cubero, a Madrid-based architect, and the director and producer of “The Competition,” a documentary about architectural competitions, and Beverly Willis of the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation.
Following recent comments by Witold Rybczynski that “starchitects” — often unfamiliar with the cities they are designing for — are designing buildings that don’t fit into their surroundings, the NYT has posed the question: Are superstar architects ruining city skylines? Weighing in on the topic are Allison Arieff, an architecture and design writer for the NYT, Vishaan Chakrabarti, an associate professor at Columbia and a partner at SHoP Architects, Angel Borrego Cubero, a Madrid-based architect, and the director and producer of “The Competition,” a documentary about architectural competitions, and Beverly Willis of the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation.
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