David Adjaye, architect of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, approaches building design as creating “fabric” Alex Palmer The copper design on the museum is informed by craft ...
From Architectural Record, May, 1914. Read a PDF of the original article here. Note – In connection with the exhibition at the Chicago Art Institute of the Chicago Architectural Club during April and ...
In the new Phaidon book "Concrete Architecture," Los Angeles writers Sam Lubell and Greg Goldin examine a construction material that’s often derided as the building block of urban eyesores, but, they ...
This article was originally published on Common Edge. Discussions of architectural form demonstrate how disability is negatively imprinted into the field of architecture. In architectural theory and ...
Written by Cruz Garcia & Nathalie Frankowski Published on May 04, 2014 Never before has the combination of technology and mass media enhanced such a prolific production and diffusion of monuments to ...
(THE CONVERSATION) – In architecture, new materials rarely emerge. For centuries, wood, masonry and concrete formed the basis for most structures on Earth. In the 1880s, the adoption of the steel ...
One of the best pieces of criticism I’ve read this year appeared a couple of weeks ago on the Awl, the online journal best known for affectless and typically New York-centric takes on contemporary ...
In architecture, new materials rarely emerge. For centuries, wood, masonry, and concrete formed the basis for most structures on Earth. In the 1880s, adoption of the steel frame changed architecture ...
In the new Phaidon book “Concrete Architecture,” Los Angeles writers Sam Lubell and Greg Goldin examine a construction material that’s often derided as the building block of urban eyesores, but, they ...
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