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Home » Topics » Architecture News

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Portfolio: Le Corbusier's Chandigarh

June 12, 2013
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In 2010, Moscow-based architecture photographer Alexey Naroditskiy shot Le Corbusier's contributions to the Indian city of Chandigarh, which the architect masterplanned in the 1950s. In 2011 Naroditskiy's photos appeared in an exhibition at the Shchusev State Museum of Architecture in Moscow. We share some of them here in light of Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes, opening June 15 at New York City's Museum of Modern Art. Click the image below.
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Humanscale Designer Niels Diffrient Remembered

Jayne Merkel
June 11, 2013
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If you are sitting in a very comfortable chair, you may owe your good fortune to designer Niels Diffrient, who died on June 8 at age 84 after a brief illness. Forbes magazine once called him “the granddaddy of ergonomic design.” He was that and so much more—the co-author with Alvin R. Tilley and Joan Bardagjy of a series of books called Humanscale 1-9, the designer of the Humanscale Freedom and Liberty chairs, Sunar Hauserman’s Helena and Jefferson Chairs, and Knoll Diffrient Chairs as well as of John Deere tractors, Trimline telephones, cockpits and truck cabs, and American Airlines graphics.
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CO Architects Livens Up Los Angeles' Natural History Museum After $135-million Renovation and Expansion

Carren Jao
June 7, 2013
No Comments
After a 12-year renovation, the museum reopens this weekend with a new garden and display spaces. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles CO Architects Los Angeles Are-invigorated Natural History Museum (NHM) of Los Angeles County will welcome the public this weekend in celebration of its centennial year and the two newest elements of its $135 million, 12-year overhaul. Taking a cue from the city’s modernist architecture, the museum blurs the line between indoors and out with the debut of the Otis Booth Pavilion and a 3.5-acre “Nature Garden.” The final two pieces of the museum’s transformation—a new 14,000-square-foot permanent exhibition
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CO Architects Livens Up Los Angeles' Natural History Museum After $135-million Renovation and Expansion

Carren Jao
June 7, 2013
No Comments
After a 12-year renovation, the museum reopens this weekend with a new garden and display spaces. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles CO Architects Los Angeles Are-invigorated Natural History Museum (NHM) of Los Angeles County will welcome the public this weekend in celebration of its centennial year and the two newest elements of its $135 million, 12-year overhaul. Taking a cue from the city’s modernist architecture, the museum blurs the line between indoors and out with the debut of the Otis Booth Pavilion and a 3.5-acre “Nature Garden.” The final two pieces of the museum’s transformation—a new 14,000-square-foot permanent exhibition
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Los Angeles' Natural History Museum Reopens After Major Expansion

Carren Jao
June 7, 2013
No Comments
After a 12-year renovation, the museum reopens this weekend with a new garden and display spaces by Mia Lehrer + Associates and CO Architects. Designed by CO Architects, the Natural History Museum's Otis Booth Pavilion is a six-story glass entrance space that re-orients the museum toward L.A.'s Exposition Boulevard, a new light rail line, and, more importantly, a flourishing greenscape in a former parking lot. A re-invigorated Natural History Museum (NHM) of Los Angeles County will welcome the public this weekend in celebration of its centennial year and the two newest elements of its $135 million, 12-year overhaul. Taking a
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Newsmaker: Jean-Louis Cohen

Suzanne-Stephens
Suzanne Stephens
June 7, 2013
No Comments
Record talks with the eminent architecture historian and architect who organized the comprehensive new Le Corbusier exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret), Villa Savoye, Poissy, 1928–31 (Photo 2012) You might say it’s about time. Finally a retrospective of the pioneering master of modern architecture has been mounted by the Architecture and Design Department at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes (on view until September 23), presents a vast range of the work of the influential architect who was born Charles-Edouard Jeanneret in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland in 1887,
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An Emerging Architect Delivers Art on a Budget

Laura Mirviss
June 6, 2013
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In 2010, Sarika Bajoria struck out on her own and started her own New York City-based architecture practice. This story originally appeared on ENR.com. Kadampa Meditation CenterPer-forma StudioNew York City Sarika Bajoria found a peaceful refuge when she started attending meditation classes at a modern Buddhist center in Manhattan three years ago. Her spiritual immersion coincided with a bold professional move: She started her own architecture practice in the thick of the recession in 2010. "It took a huge leap of faith," she says. "I had to put myself out there and market to clients, not just in New York
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LACMA Director and Peter Zumthor Make the Case for Museum's Redesign

Carren Jao
June 5, 2013
No Comments
Model of Peter Zumthor's scheme for LACMA. Installation view. The Presence of the Past: Peter Zumthor Reconsiders LACMA, June 9 - Sept. 15, 2013. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) has long been due for a major overhaul, according to its director Michael Govan and the Pritzker Prize-winning architect Peter Zumthor, who has been commissioned to re-think the museum’s east campus. “If you were to restore it, it would not really work because I think it never really worked well as a museum,” said Zumthor at a packed public conversation with Govan at the museum on Monday night.
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2013 Venice Biennale: A Look at the 55th International Art Exhibition

June 4, 2013
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The Venice Biennale opened to the public on Saturday with national pavilions representing 88 countries—including, for the first time, the Vatican.
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AIA 2013: National AIA Votes to Allow Two Individuals to Win Gold Medal

Cathleen-McGuigan
Cathleen McGuigan
Laura Raskin
Laura Raskin
June 4, 2013
No Comments
Photo © Matt Wargo Denise Scott Brown in front of the Provincial Capitol Building in Toulouse, France. Designed by Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates, it was completed in 1999. On June 18, the national board of directors of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) voted to allow the national AIA Gold Medal to be awarded to two individuals. The amendment was voted on at a meeting at the national AIA convention in Denver. The updated rule goes into effect on January 1, 2014. The New York chapter of the AIA spearheaded the initiative to overturn the rules governing the awarding
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