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Dunrobin Shores / Christopher Simmonds Architect

Architects: Christopher Simmonds Architect
Location: Ottawa, ON, Canada
Year: 2014
Photographs: Doublespace Photography
Location: Ottawa, ON, Canada
Year: 2014
Photographs: Doublespace Photography
Master Plan Revealed for Binhai Eco City in Tianjin

Offices Business Incubato / bureau faceB

Architects: bureau faceB
Location: Nanterre, France
Associate Architects: Ateliers
Area: 17541.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Vincent Fillon, Jonathan Alexandre
Location: Nanterre, France
Associate Architects: Ateliers
Area: 17541.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Vincent Fillon, Jonathan Alexandre

MARK Magazine #51
Articles on China’s building boom often highlight the property bubble, megalomaniac planners, governmental corruption and private graft, substandard building practices and the destruction of the nation’s cultural heritage.In Mark… #51, we interviewed four Chinese architects on four aspects of
The Critics Speak: 6 Reasons why Hadid Shouldn’t Have Sued the New York Review of Books

Hadid’s lawsuit did manage to elicit an apology from Filler, but probably not the one she was hoping for: Filler posted a retraction admitting that his review confused the number of deaths involved in all construction in Qatar in 2012-13 (almost 1,000) with the number of deaths on Hadid’s own Al Wakrah stadium (exactly zero). However, much of Filler’s comments criticizing Hadid’s cold attitude to conditions for immigrant workers in Qatar remain unaddressed.
Throughout the week, a number of other critics took this opportunity to pile more criticism on Hadid, unanimously agreeing that the lawsuit was a bad idea. Read on after the break to see the six reasons they gave explaining why.
Morvest Headquarters / Anthrop Architects

Architects: Anthrop Architects
Location: Noordwyk, Midrand, South Africa
Year: 2013
Photographs: Dewald van Helsdingen
Location: Noordwyk, Midrand, South Africa
Year: 2013
Photographs: Dewald van Helsdingen
UNESCO: Friend or Foe?


“Seoul: Towards a Meta-City” Exhibition Opens in Berlin
On Thursday, the Aedes Network Campus Berlin (ANCB) Metropolitan Laboratory hosted a symposium to mark the opening of the exhibition ”Seoul: Towards a New City,” in collaboration with the City of Seoul. The city has identified three key objectives to help them strike a balance between restoration and change when moving forward with future development: revival of history, restoration of nature, and renewal of people’s lives. Seven projects that reflect these goals are on display at the exhibition. For more details, continue reading after the break.Lycée Louis Barthou / Pierre Marsan
Federal Criminal Court / Durisch + Nolli Architetti + Bearth & Deplazes Architekten

Architects: Durisch + Nolli Architetti, Bearth & Deplazes Architekten
Location: Bellinzona, Switzerland
General Planner: CDL Bearth & Deplazes AG, Durisch + Nolli Architetti Sagl, Lugano Jan Meier, Gesamtprojektleiter
Year: 2013
Photographs: Tonatiuh Ambrosetti
Location: Bellinzona, Switzerland
General Planner: CDL Bearth & Deplazes AG, Durisch + Nolli Architetti Sagl, Lugano Jan Meier, Gesamtprojektleiter
Year: 2013
Photographs: Tonatiuh Ambrosetti
Uruguai Station / JBMC ARCHITECTS

Architects: JBMC ARCHITECTS
Location: Tijuca, Rio de Janeiro – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Jbmc Architects: Beatriz Pimenta Corrêa, Cecilia Pires, Cynthia Melo, Emiliano Homrich, Frederico Freitas, Gabriela Assis, João Batista Martinez Corrêa, Pedro Câmara and Sandra Morikawa
Jbmc : Caio D´Alfonso, Carina Oshita, Diogo Luz, Mariana Nito, Nara Borges and Raffaella Yacar
Area: 13774.0 sqm
Year: 2012
Photographs: Nelson Kon
Location: Tijuca, Rio de Janeiro – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Jbmc Architects: Beatriz Pimenta Corrêa, Cecilia Pires, Cynthia Melo, Emiliano Homrich, Frederico Freitas, Gabriela Assis, João Batista Martinez Corrêa, Pedro Câmara and Sandra Morikawa
Jbmc : Caio D´Alfonso, Carina Oshita, Diogo Luz, Mariana Nito, Nara Borges and Raffaella Yacar
Area: 13774.0 sqm
Year: 2012
Photographs: Nelson Kon
Sky Loft / KUBE architecture

Architects: KUBE architecture
Location: Washington, DC 20008, USA
Year: 2014
Photographs: Greg Powers Photography
Location: Washington, DC 20008, USA
Year: 2014
Photographs: Greg Powers Photography
House in Komae / architect cafe

Architects: architect cafe
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Area: 154.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Satoshi Asakawa
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Area: 154.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Satoshi Asakawa
Winners Named for 2013-2014 Steel Design Student Competition: Border Crossing

Capco and Bold Rocket offices / D+DS architecture office

Architects: D+DS architecture office
Location: London, UK
Year: 2014
Photographs: Courtesy of D+DS architecture office
Location: London, UK
Year: 2014
Photographs: Courtesy of D+DS architecture office
3XN Designs Affordable Housing Tower in Denmark

Newly released renders and model photographs depict the tower as a sweeping semi-circular form that rises in steps. The gradual elevation of the building will start at the street, defining the transition from the surrounding small-scale buildings to the urban high-rise typology. For more information and images, read on after the break.
Widmi Building / am-architektur

Architects: am-architektur
Location: Lenzburg, Switzerland
Area: 8200.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Michael Haug, Fréderic Giger
Location: Lenzburg, Switzerland
Area: 8200.0 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Michael Haug, Fréderic Giger
The Architect’s Guide to Writing

The following is an excerpt from Bill Schmalz’s book The Architect’s Guide to Writing.
The architecture, design, and construction professions are
seen, by ourselves and by those outside the professions, as visual and
tectonic fields. Architects and designers are trained as visual artists,
using two- and three-dimensional means to depict buildings, spaces, and
urban environments. We learn how to sketch; to build physical and
digital models; and to draw plans, elevations, sections, and details.
Similarly, contractors and construction managers are trained in
scheduling, cost estimating, and the physical requirements of
constructing buildings. These are valuable skills for us design and
construction professionals at all stages in our careers. But for most of
us, there comes a time when we need to write stuff, when written
documents dominate our professional lives. Letters, proposals, reports,
specifications, contracts, RFIs and RFI responses, meeting minutes,
emails, and white papers are just some of the types of documents that we
spend much of our time writing.
Unfortunately, we receive little training in our writing
skills. True, our elementary school education may have given us the
basics of English grammar and composition. In college, most of us had to
fulfill liberal arts requirements that involved writing. But when we
entered the profession, we were unprepared to deal with how much we
would have to write, and how important it would be to our professional
lives.
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