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Home » Topics » Architecture News

Architecture News
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Students Converge in D.C. For 2009 Solar Power Extravaganza

Alanna Malone
October 28, 2009
No Comments

Recent visitors to the National Mall in Washington, D.C., might have wondered if they accidentally stumbled upon a mobile-home park of the future.


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Expansion Plans Put Yale Alums at Odds

C. J. Hughes
October 26, 2009
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A dustup over Yale University’s expansion plans has pitted alumni architects against one another. Robert A.M. Stern, the dean of the Yale School of Architecture, from which he graduated in 1965, is designing two new residential colleges for the Ivy League institution’s campus in New Haven, Connecticut. Yale hasn’t added any new dorms since the early 1960s.  Photo © Ann Lane Rick Seeley G. Mudd Library (1982), designed by Roth and Moore, is slated for demolition. Related Links: Yale Taps Stern for Major Project Recession Halts Yale Construction Projects Newsmaker: Robert A.M. Stern But the intended site for the Gothic-style
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An Unexpected Building Boom in L.A.

Joe Florkowski
October 23, 2009
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The nine-college Los Angeles Community College District is in a unique situation.  Despite a nationwide economic slump that is one of the worst in 50 years, the district has money to spend—and to build. LACCD, which serves more than 220,000 students throughout Los Angeles County, is in the middle of a $5.7-billion building program, funded by three bonds passed in the last eight years. The program, which began 2004 and is expected to be completed by 2014, is intended to modernize and add new facilities throughout the district. Image courtesy LACCD The East L.A. College Performing and Fine Arts Center,
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Housing Could Spark A Rebound in 2010

Bruce Buckley
October 22, 2009
No Comments
Following three years of precipitous decline, the construction market may have finally hit bottom and be in the early phase of a rebound with housing leading the way. McGraw-Hill Construction is forecasting that total construction starts will climb 11% to $466.2 billion in 2010, following an estimated 25% decline in 2009. The forecast was announced at the 2010 Construction Outlook conference in Washington, D.C. Photo: Bruce Buckley Robert Murray delivered the McGraw-Hill Construction forecast. Related Links: Architects Brace for a Prolonged Recession Special Report: Recession and Recovery ENR: See How Last Year's Forecast Measured Up After a 39% drop in
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Housing Could Spark A Rebound in 2010

Bruce Buckley
October 21, 2009
No Comments
Following three years of precipitous decline, the construction market may have finally hit bottom and be in the early phase of a rebound with housing leading the way. McGraw-Hill Construction is forecasting that total construction starts will climb 11% to $466.2 billion in 2010, following an estimated 25% decline in 2009. The forecast was announced at the 2010 Construction Outlook conference in Washington, D.C. Photo: Bruce Buckley Robert Murray delivered the McGraw-Hill Construction forecast. Related Links: Architects Brace for a Prolonged Recession Special Report: Recession and Recovery ENR: See How Last Year's Forecast Measured Up After a 39% drop in
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Architects Brace for Prolonged Recession

C. J. Hughes
October 21, 2009
No Comments
As summer gave way to fall, some economic indicators suggested the Great Recession was ending, and yet many architects continue to struggle in an environment that provides only scattered reasons for optimism. Much of the gloom can be explained through numbers. For example, the Dodge Index from McGraw-Hill Construction, which measures all current construction activity in the U.S., from homes to highways, has stood at an average of 85 for 2009, which is far below the average of 135 for 2007. “And if you adjust for inflation, it’s even worse,” says Kim Kennedy, an economist with McGraw-Hill Construction Research. Related
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AIA Re-Launches Online Documents Service, Offers Free Trial

October 20, 2009
No Comments
Available Documents via Documents-on-Demand  A101–2007, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor, Where Basis of Payment is a Stipulated Sum  A105–2007, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor for a Residential or Small Commercial Project  A201–2007, General Conditions of the Contract for Construction A401–2007, Standard Form of Agreement Between Contractor and Subcontractor B101–2007, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect B105–2007, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect for a Residential or Small Commercial Project G701–2001, Change Order G701CMa–1992, Change Order, Construction Manager-Adviser Edition G702–1992, Application and Certificate for Payment G702CMa–1992, Application and Certificate for Payment,
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Leaky Libeskind Roof to Be Fixed at Last

David Hill
October 19, 2009
No Comments
Daniel Libeskind’s bold $110 million addition to the Denver Art Museum opened to the public on October 7, 2006. Three weeks later, after a fall snowstorm, the building’s sharply angled roof began to leak. Water could be seen dripping from a skylight in the four-story El Pomar Grand Atrium. Photo courtesy Wikipedia/Archipreneur (top); David Hill (bottom) Libeskind’s bold $110 million addition to the Denver Art Museum has been leaking since shortly after it opened in October 2006. Related Links: New Addition to Denver Museum Robert Ivy: Sky High Repairing the roof has proved to be no simple matter. In the
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World Monuments Fund Announces 2010 Watch List

Aleksandr Bierig
October 15, 2009
No Comments
The World Monuments Fund (WMF) has announced its biannual list of “watch sites”—buildings and landscapes of significant cultural value that, according to the organization, require urgent attention. The WMF states that the sites are selected based on four criteria: “significance, urgency of the situation, viability of proposed actions, and relevance of the issues to the heritage field at large.” Photo courtesy World Monuments Fund Afghanistan, Old City of Herat. The 2010 list consists of 93 sites located in 47 countries. Of those, 11 are in Africa and the Middle East, 38 in North and South America (with nine in the
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Nouvel's First London Building, One New Change, Reaches Milestone

David Sokol
October 13, 2009
No Comments
Images courtesy One New Change Work is progressing on Jean Nouvel’s One New Change in central London. Related Links: New Retail and Office Center by Nouvel Nouvel Wins 2008 Pritzker Prize Nouvel's First California Project on Hold While construction launches have come to a virtual halt in central London, highly visible projects that predate the economic downturn are coming to fruition. A trio of wind turbines that will crown the 43-story Castle House designed by London-based architecture firm Hamiltons are being fabricated in Sweden. The tropical-colored ceramic skins of the Renzo Piano–designed Central Saint Giles have begun wowing tourists strolling
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