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STRIKING CONCRETE WORKERS STOP CONSTRUCTION AT 30 NEW YORK CITY DEVELOPMENT SITES
On Wednesday, construction came to halt at 30 sites in New York City, including Hudson Yards, after cement workers went on strike. Crain’s reported, “At midnight this morning, a collective bargaining agreement ran out between the council of carpenters and a trade organization called the Cement League. The league is made up of contractors that erect the concrete skeletons for high-rise buildings and hire district council workers for part of that job under a collective contract.” As of Wednesday afternoon, the strike was ongoing.
BREAKING> NADER TEHRANI NAMED DEAN OF COOPER UNION SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
New York City’s Cooper Union finally found a new leader. Nader Tehrani has been appointed dean of the Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture. He joins the school this month, taking over where Anthony Vidler left off. Tehrani, formerly of Office dA, is now principal of NADAAA.
WEST 8 DELIVERS DYNAMIC QUEENS QUAY, A COMPLETE STREET IN TORONTO
After more than a decade of planning and three years of construction, Queens Quay in Toronto has been turned into a veritable urbanist’s dreamscape on the waterfront. Four lanes of traffic have been reduced to two making room for a separated bike path, separated light rail, benches, thousands of new trees, and extra-wide pedestrian promenades with pavers set into maple leaf patterns.
BOSTON’S ICA LOOKING TO EXPAND OUT FROM ITS DILLER SCOFIDIO + RENFRO HOME
Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) is apparently getting a little too big for its Diller Scofidio + Renfro–designed home along the Boston Harbor.
SCANDALOUS NO MORE: THE WATERGATE HOTEL POST-$125 MILLION RENOVATION LOOKS MORE CLASSY AND ELEGANT THAN EVER
As Washington, D.C.’s first “unapologetically luxurious” stomping ground for the rich and famous, The Watergate Hotel recently underwent a $125 million modernizing facelift. Inextricably connected with the Watergate scandal, the hotel has maintained its avant-garde design and curvaceous, classic elegance in a nod to its 1960s design by Italian architect Luigi Moretti.
3D PROJECTION TECHNOLOGY FLEETINGLY BRINGS BACK THE BAMIYAN BUDDHA THAT WAS DESTROYED BY THE TALIBAN
The hollow in the sandstone cliffs of Bamiyan, central Afghanistan, still harks back to the looming Bamiyan Buddha statues that once emerged from the cliff-face, before they were destroyed by theTaliban in 2001. A Chinese couple has created 3D projection technology to holographically recreate the destroyed statues which, standing at 180 feet and 120 feet respectively, lorded over the Bamiyan valley for 1500 years.
PLANS EMERGE FOR THE WORLD’S FIRST ELECTRICITY-GENERATING TIDAL LAGOON—AND IT WILL COST A HEFTY $1.5 BILLION
ARCHITECTURE, CITY TERRAIN, ENVIRONMENT, INTERNATIONAL, SUSTAINABILITY,TRANSPORTATION
WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 2015
KINDRA COOPER.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 2015
KINDRA COOPER.
UK developer Tidal Lagoon Power has lodged a proposal to create the world’s first electricity-generating tidal lagoon. Demanding a budget of over $1.5 billion, the Swansea Tidal Lagoon is slated to generate clean, renewable energy for 155,000 homes for up to 120 years.
RICHARD ROGERS TO LEAD PARLIAMENTARY INQUIRY INTO HOW DESIGN OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT AFFECTS BEHAVIOR
Riding on a wave of psychographic research indicating positive correlations between productivity and the work environment, architect Richard Rogershas launched an ambitious parliamentary inquiry into how design overall affects behavior.
The founder of Rogers Stirk Harbor + Partners kicked off the eight-month Design Commission inquiry this June before the Houses of Parliament in London. The cross-party investigation led by Rogers will explore how design in planning of the built environment creates a tendency towards positive behaviors within local communities. The inquiry was lodged the same week as newly-released researchwhich supports the long-held view that cities which promote physical activity benefit from economic productivity gains.
BROKEN UMBRELLAS AND BICYCLE WHEELS GET A SECOND LIFE IN THESE TWO, COMPLETELY RECYCLABLE PAVILIONS ON GOVERNORS ISLAND
Two whimsical summer pavilions on New York City’s Governors Island have been slated for reuse elsewhere, themselves built from recycled and repurposed materials.
The Billion Oyster Pavilion by BanG Studio and the Organic Growth Pavilion by Izaskun Chinchilla Architects both tied as winners in the annual City of Dreams design competition, and the jury, torn between the two, greenlighted both pavilions, launching a dedicated Kickstarter campaign to crowdfund their construction.
PRODUCT> WINDOWS, WALLS, AND DOORS FOR SPATIAL SOLUTIONS
DDG IS SET TO BEGIN CONSTRUCTION ON THIS RAZOR-EDGED, TRIANGULAR BUILDING IN TRIBECA
Two very narrow parking lots in Manhattan’s Tribeca neighborhood will soon be filled in with a pair of very narrow condo buildings designed and developed by DDG. The firm’s plan for 100 Franklin Street was approved by the Landmarks Preservation Commission in early 2014, but only recently made it through the Board of Standards and Appeals (BSA) which had to grant a zoning variance for the site.
PORTLAND FOODIES REJOICE: SNØHETTA IS DESIGNING THE PLANNED JAMES BEARD PUBLIC MARKET
It seems that almost every major West Coast city has a public market. Seattle has Pike Place Market (construction is underway on an upcoming expansion now set to open in 2016), San Francisco has the Ferry Building Marketplace, Los Angeles has Grand Central Market, and Vancouver has Granville Island. And San Diego may get a public market in Point Loma this summer.
But the city of Portland—the small but mighty West coast food hub chock full of inventive restaurants, abundant farmers’ markets, and food trucks—has gone without a public market since the Portland Public Market closed in 1942. Until now.
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