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Frank Gehry: The Musical

Janelle Zara
July 21, 2014
No Comments
Dancing architectural models channel "West Side Story" as a group of artists pay homage to the architect in an unusual exhibition.  Gunpowder-equipped mobiles by artist Cai Guo-Qiang illuminate models of Frank Gehry's work in Solaris Chronicles, an exhibition at the future site of LUMA Arles. In 2018, Frank Gehry’s 180-foot-tall Arts Resource Center, with towering swaths of pixelated-looking steel, is set to open on a 20-acre former train repair site in the South of France. It will be the centerpiece of LUMA Arles, an art and culture campus founded by Swiss collector Maja Hoffmann that is slowly taking shape
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Pop-Up in Yangon, Myanmar, Tests Out Revitalization

Honora Shea
July 21, 2014
No Comments
Entrepreneur Ivan Pun and New York-based architecture firm Leong Leong have transformed a transit shed into a light-filled space showcasing rotating art exhibitions, design-oriented retail, a restaurant, and other programming.  The gritty, textured exterior of the shed contrasts with the light, minimal interior.  To visit Yangon, Myanmar, now is to experience a city in flux. The downtown riverfront, once a bustling cosmopolitan dream, is home to streets lined with stately old colonial buildings, full of lost history and oozing with potential. Amidst the recent handover of power from the military to a civilian government, rustlings of revitalization projects
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Newsmaker: Scott Rothkopf

Fred A. Bernstein
July 18, 2014
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Museum curators tend to stay behind the scenes, especially when high-profile artists are involved. But the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Jeff Koons: A Retrospective, which runs through October 19, has been so lavishly praised that its curator, Scott Rothkopf, couldn’t stay out of the spotlight if he tried.


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Market Focus: Office Buildings

Data from McGraw Hill Dodge Analytics
Data from
July 16, 2014
No Comments
The recovery of the office-building construction market began slowly at first, lagging behind other commercial property types. But the sector's rebound is beginning to pick up energy as U.S. job growth improves. Click the image above to view a full presentation of these stats [PDF].
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Task Force to Clarify Reporting on Hazmats and Alternatives

Bill Millard
July 16, 2014
No Comments
Architects seeking safe, sustainable materials for their buildings have often had to operate in either an information vacuum or wade through an array of rating systems that can be burdensome and baffling. The complexity of supply chains sometimes means that no one is certain what substances a product contains; in other cases, a known material passes muster with one program while raising red flags with another. Manufacturers, too, struggle with the discrepancies and redundancies of different programs' reporting requirements. Now, with support from the U.S. Green Building Council, four major green-manufacturing organizations are striving to simplify the process of assessing
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AECOM's $6 Billion Offer for URS Keeps the Company Whole

Debra K. Rubin
July 14, 2014
No Comments
This article first appeared on ENR. Four months after URS agreed to an activist investor's demand for a reshaped board and new strategic options to boost its share price, the firm is set to be acquired by AECOM. The deal, worth about $6 billion in cash, stock, and assumed debt, would keep URS intact. The firms, which announced the transaction on July 13, said it would create the latest global giant, particularly in oil, gas, power, and government services, with more than $19 billion in revenue and 95,000 employees in 150 countries. The $56.31 per share price is about 19
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Rudolph on the Market

Fred A. Bernstein
July 9, 2014
No Comments
Two of Paul Rudolph's houses are for sale, and they may be joined by his Orange County Government Center. Via michiganmodern.org Paul Rudolph's Frank and Anne Parcells House (1970) in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, is for sale. Its projecting rooms resemble the architect's Orange County Government Center in Goshen, New York. Two buildings by Paul Rudolph—houses in Michigan and Massachusetts—are on the market, and they may soon be joined by a third: the Orange County Government Center, the sprawling structure in Goshen, New York, that has been the cause of hand wringing by preservationists for over a decade, and has been
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Obituary: Mario Coyula Cowley, 1935-2014

Belmont Freeman, FAIA
July 8, 2014
No Comments
Designed by Coyula and other colleagues, El Parque de los Mártires Universitarios, completed in 1967, stands at a major intersection down the hill from the University of Havana's steps, where it remains one of the city's most powerful monuments to the revolution. The celebrated Cuban architect and urban planner Mario Coyula Cowley died in Havana on July 7, after a long battle with cancer. He was 79 years old. During his career Coyula was director of the School of Architecture at the Instituto Superior Politécnico José Antonio Echeverria (ISPJAE), head of the Group for the Integral Development of the Capital,
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First Look: BIG's BIG Maze at the National Building Museum

Amanda Kolson Hurley
July 7, 2014
No Comments
At 57 feet square and 18 feet high, the maze occupies the eastern third of the National Building Museum's Great Hall.  The vast Great Hall of the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., is as tricky to program as it is impressive to behold. More than 300 feet long and several stories high, the Renaissance Revival hall is often rented out for private events, and its columns and arcades provide a suitably grand backdrop during gala dinners. But the space tends to swallow up lectures and other small-scale public programs. To make better use of it, the museum installed
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In Tokyo, Protestors Don't Want 1964 Olympics Stadium Replaced by Zaha Hadid's

Naomi Pollock, FAIA
July 7, 2014
No Comments
Protestors gather around the National Stadium on Saturday, hoping to save it from demolition. On Saturday, placard-wearing protestors took to the streets of central Tokyo and peacefully encircled the 50,000-seat Kasumigaoka National Stadium designed by Mitsuo Katayama and erected for the 1964 Olympics. In preparation for hosting the games again in 2020, the vintage structure is being readied for demolition followed by replacement with a futuristic, Zaha Hadid-designed arena several times its size. But a collection of architects and lay people alike are hoping to convince the Japan Sport Council (JSC) to do otherwise. Japan does not have a great
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