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Home » Topics » Architecture News

Architecture News
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Crystal Bridges Museum Buys Flood-Damaged Frank Lloyd Wright Home

C. J. Hughes
January 17, 2014
No Comments
Photo courtesy Tarantino Studio The Bachman-Wilson House (1954), designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, has been purchased by the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. A Frank Lloyd Wright house that its owners say is imperiled because of frequent flooding will soon be headed for higher ground, and presumably, drier ground, too. On Wednesday, the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art announced that it had purchased Wright’s 1954 Bachman-Wilson house, which it plans to relocate from a riverbank in New Jersey to its campus in Bentonville, Arkansas. “It won’t face an issue of rising water here,” said Diane Carroll, a spokeswoman
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Newsmaker: Sean Carlson Perry

Rita Catinella Orrell
January 17, 2014
No Comments
Using a unique business model, a New York-based designer aims to provide design services for the formerly homeless. Sean Carlson Perry, founder of an eponymous Brooklyn, New York-based full-service design firm, has worked on high-end residential and commercial interiors, luxury retail projects, graphics, and furniture design. Perry, 31, is also the founder of Design Exchange, a new project to create comfortable living environments for those in need. Photo courtesy Sean Carlson Perry Sean Carlson Perry, founder of Design Exchange Working with two part-time interns and a handful of volunteers and subcontractors, Perry helps provide formerly homeless individuals and families, including
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Market Focus: K-12 Construction

Data from McGraw Hill Dodge Analytics
Data from
January 16, 2014
No Comments
School starts, which had been hit hard by the fiscal condition of state and municipal governments, should rebound in the coming year as the country recovers from the recession and voters approve new bond measures to fund construction. Click the image above to view a full presentation of these stats [PDF].
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Glory of Spangen Social Housing Complex Restored

Thomas Wensing
January 16, 2014
No Comments
Molenaar & Co, Hebly Theunissen, and Michael van Gessel led a pristine renovation of the Spangen social-housing complex, which pioneered public deck access. The revolutionary Spangen social-housing complex (1919-1921) in Rotterdam, by Michiel Brinkman, has recently been immaculately restored. The project pioneered “street in the sky” deck access, an idea that famously inspired Alison and Peter Smithson’s design of the 1950s Golden Lane housing project in London. The Spangen estate, or Justus van Effen complex, is a rectangular four-story brick urban block, centered around two large courts. Concrete balconies give access to the duplex apartments on the top floors. In
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Green Globes Gets a New Leader

Peter Fairley
January 16, 2014
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The U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED standard, long synonymous with environmentally conscious construction in the U.S., is being forced to share some of its limelight, first with the Living Building Challenge, which has only certified a handful of buildings since its 2006 launch but is steadily gaining momentum since its 2006 launch, and now with Green Globes. Photo © Jill Richards Jerry Yudelson, president of Green Globes The rating system, which advertises cheaper and faster certification, is winning some important backers. In October the U.S. Government Services Administration (GSA) recommended, for the first time, that federal agencies consider Green Globes
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Newsmaker: Tomas Koolhaas

Anna Fixsen
January 16, 2014
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Tomas Koolhaas remembers when his father, architect Rem Koolhaas, was laying the groundwork for his firm Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) in their London apartment. As a youngster, Tomas was allowed to doodle on the office drafting boards and shovel alongside construction workers. Both parties branched out: OMA became a ubiquitous international architecture firm, and Tomas pursued his interest in media and film. Now, after 10 years in cinema, Tomas, 33, is returning to his roots. For the past two years, the Santa Monica–based filmmaker has been piecing together REM, a feature-length documentary about his father, his father’s buildings, and—most
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Exhibition Previews Herzog & de Meuron's M+ Museum in Hong Kong

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
January 15, 2014
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Herzog & de Meuron’s design for the M+ museum in Hong Kong. An exhibition examining plans for M+, the new visual arts museum scheduled to open in Hong Kong in late 2017, is on display through February 9 at ArtisTree, a multipurpose venue on Hong Kong Island. Curated by Aric Chen, who is the new museum’s curator of design and architecture and an international correspondent for Architectural Record, Building M+: The Museum and Architecture Collection looks at designs for the institution’s building and some of the items that will fill its design and architecture galleries. Last year, an international jury
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AIA Announces 2014 Honor Award Recipients

January 10, 2014
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The votes are in: The American Institute of Architects has selected the recipients the 2014 Institute Honor Awards. The 26 winning projects range from the swanky renovation of the Marc Jacobs Showroom in New York City to KieranTimberlake’s tranquil transformation of the Quaker Meeting House at the Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D.C. Click through the slide show to view the full list of winners. For Architecture: Centre for International Governance Innovation CampusKPMB Architects
Ontario, Canada
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MoMA to Demolish Tod Williams Billie Tsien Folk Art Building After All

Cathleen-McGuigan
Cathleen McGuigan
Laura Raskin
Laura Raskin
January 8, 2014
No Comments

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) announced today that in its next phase of expansion, it will tear down the 2001 American Folk Art Museum building designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects.


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Almost Anything Goes: Architecture and Inclusivity

Carren Jao
January 3, 2014
No Comments
An exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara highlights today's expanded definition of architectural practice. Ball-Nogues Studio's paper-mached toilet paper lamps at the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara in California. Gone are the days when emerging architects were confined to building houses. Opening this Sunday at the recently re-branded Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara (MCASB), Almost Anything Goes: Architecture and Inclusivity highlights the many ways a studio can practice in the new century. "We wanted to show a broad sample of all these disparate types of practices," says visiting curator Brigitte Kouo, a designer with a
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