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Home » Topics » Architecture News

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Shigeru Ban Offers Aid to His Native Japan

Naomi Pollock, FAIA
April 21, 2011
No Comments
For quake and tsunami victims left homeless, simple shelters help ease discomfort. Photo courtesy Shigeru Ban Architects Emergency centers set up in gymnasiums and other large structures offer little privacy. In response, Shigeru Ban conceived a partition system made of paper tubes and canvas sheets. “I have been to disaster areas all over the world,” says Shigeru Ban. But never had the Japanese architect and veteran relief worker seen the degree of devastation that struck his homeland on March 11, 2011. The 9.0-magnitude earthquake, followed by the massive tsunami that crashed down on 311 miles of coastline, left thousands of
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AIA New York Honors 38 Winners of Design Awards

Jenna M. McKnight
April 19, 2011
No Comments
Photo ' Jeff Goldberg/Esto for Ennead Architects Click to view winners of the architecture awards. Click to view winners of the interiors awards. Click to view winners of the urban design awards. Click to view winners of the unbuilt work awards. A skyscraper in China, a wastewater treatment plant in New York, and an art museum in North Carolina are among the 38 winners of AIA New York’s 2011 Design Awards. Now in its 30th year, the annual awards program recognizes exemplary projects located in New York City or designed by architects practicing in New York City. Honor and merit
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COTE Announces Top Ten Green Projects

Paula Melton
April 15, 2011
No Comments
Photo © John Linden Cherokee Studios, Los Angeles, CA The American Institute of Architects Committee on the Environment (AIA-COTE) has announced its Top Ten Green Projects for 2011. “The bar has been raised” since the Top Ten competition began, noted members of the jury. “Now we want to see diverse project types, projects that resolve urban issues or social issues, projects that change occupant behavior.” Related Links: Cherokee Studios LOTT Clean Water Alliance OS House NREL Model Crafted for Buildings To Achieve Net-Zero Energy Use Step Up on Fifth Vancouver Convention Center West The jurors also noted particular interest in
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FSC, SFI Battle Heats Up Over Paper, ForestEthics

Paula Melton
April 14, 2011
No Comments
If you thought the war of the woods was over, think again. Paper is the new front in the ongoing battle between the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI). The advocacy group ForestEthics recently announced that seven major companies would stop using the SFI label on their paper products. Photo courtesy Wikipedia Seven major companies, including Allstate Insurance Company (above) and Office Depot, recently announced that they will stop using the SFI label on their paper products. Related Links: Not Enough Votes for LEED-Certified Wood Benchmark GreenSource Magazine According to a ForestEthics press release, the following
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Nicholas Clark Architects Designs Hospital for Haiti

Tom Sawyer
April 11, 2011
No Comments
Work is well under way on the 320-bed facility being constructed by Partners in Health, a Boston-based nonprofit group. Constructing any major hospital is a challenge, but building a 320-bed state-of-the-art teaching hospital for $16 million in the highlands of Haiti is fraught with difficulties. Haitian workers are learning U.S.-style construction, tempered by budget and supply-chain realities. The design, donated by Nicholas Clark Architects, uses natural ventilation and solar power to counter spotty electrical service. HVAC is used sparingly because of power limitations and a lack of HVAC maintenance services in Mirebalais. Yet the aid group Partners in Health (PIH)
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Serie Architects finds new use for an old factory in China

Laura Raskin
Laura Raskin
April 11, 2011
No Comments

When Serie Architects was selected in March 2010 along with Grimshaw's London office and Berlin-based Pysall Ruge Architekten to transform a group of disused steel factory buildings in Hangzhou, into a new mixed-use complex, the firm faced a big challenge.


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In Aspen, Wrecking Ball to Swing on Given Institute by Modernist Harry Weese

David Hill
April 8, 2011
No Comments
Images courtesy Given Institute Built in 1972, the 12,000-square-foot Given Institute is owned by the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Related Links Demolition Looms for Modernist Building by Weese Expansion for Weese’s Arena Stage Upgrade to Harry Weese’s Marcus Center Demolition appears imminent for the Given Institute, a 1972 concrete-block building in Aspen, Colorado, designed by the late Chicago architect Harry Weese. Despite rescue efforts by city officials and preservationists, the Given’s owner, the University of Colorado School of Medicine, plans to bulldoze the building on April 15 and sell the 2.25-acre property to a next-door neighbor for $13.8
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An Expo grows in Xi'an

Clare Jacobson
April 8, 2011
No Comments
Drawing courtesy of Plasma Studio The Theme Pavilion, which is faced in solid bronze sheets, offers views of an adjacent lake through windows in its finger-like wings. Drawing courtesy of Plasma Studio London-based Plasma Studio is completing its competition-winning project for the Xi’an International Horticultural Exposition 2011, which opens on April 28 and expects to host 12 million guests. Called “Flowing Gardens,” the project is a series of buildings and landscapes set along an axis to create a centerpiece to the 418-hectare site. The Expo lies outside the ancient capital of Xi’an in the newly formed Chan-Ba Ecological District where
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Moshe Safdie Designs Golden Dream Bay in Qinhuangdao, China

Fred A. Bernstein
April 7, 2011
No Comments

After 40 years of building libraries, museums and government buildings around the world, Moshe Safdie may still be best known for Habitat 67, his experimental “town” of stacked housing units in Montreal.


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Steve Jobs, the Demo Man

Sarah Amelar
April 4, 2011
No Comments
Decades ago, Steve Jobs purchased the historic Jackling mansion in Silicon Valley. In February, he finally succeeded in tearing the house down. Photo courtesy Town of Woodside History Committee The white-stucco house had an unusual and superbly insulating double-wall system, evoking the heft of adobe. The massing drew inspiration from Andalusian villages. Culminating years of legal battle with preservationists, Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs finally demolished the historic Jackling House on his property in Woodside, California, in February. This affluent Silicon Valley enclave, some 30 miles from San Francisco, issued the demolition permit, and, within days, the 1926 mansion—by architect
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