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Home » Topics » Architecture News

Architecture News
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Seongnam City Hall

Henry Ng
March 16, 2008
No Comments
KMD's Government Building Alights Like a Bird Seongnam, a satellite city southeast of Seoul, South Korea, recently broke ground on a city hall that it hopes will symbolize the young community’s aspirations at a pivotal point in its growth. Chief among this building’s concerns is to sit lightly in its environment. Images courtesy KMD Architects Seongnam’s new city hall occupies a site in 250 acres of parkland at the center of town (top). KMD Architects attempted to convey lightness with its design by lofting the building on piers (above). Throughout the interior, garden atria will brighten and ventilate workspaces (right).
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Miami Art Museum

Jennifer LeClaire
March 16, 2008
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Herzog & de Meuron Tap Tropical Climate for Design Ideas It’s not quite the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, but it will come close enough to stir a visitor’s imagination just the same. Herzog & de Meuron’s design for the new Miami Art Museum (MAM) aims to produce a living building where the outdoors come inside to frame galleries that bridge continents and cultures. Image © Herzog & de Meuron A large roof will shelter a series of gallery volumes, located on an elevated terrace, at the new Miami Art Museum. When the new $220 million facility opens in 2011, it
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National Performing Arts Center

Andrew Yang
March 16, 2008
No Comments
Banyan Tree Inspires Shape of Taiwan's Largest Arts Hall The Dutch firm Mecanoo is designing the largest performing arts facility in Taiwan: the 1-million-square-foot National Performing Arts Center. It will be located inside Wei-Wu-Ying Metropolitan Park, a former military base, in the city of Kaohsiung. Mecanoo won the commission in 2007 after competing against Zaha Hadid of London, Kiyoshi Sey Takeyama Amorphe of Tokyo, Artech Architects of Taiwan, and Weber + Hofer Architects of Switzerland. Images courtesy Mecanoo Mecanoo has designed an undulating topographical roof structure for Taiwan’s National Performing Arts Center (top).  The design was inspired by the banyan
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News Highlights of the Week: March 8 ' March 14, 2008

James Murdock
March 14, 2008
No Comments
Construction on two towers at the World Trade Center, designed by Richard Rogers and Fumihiko Maki, will begin this week—or by the end of the month, depending on whom you believe, and whether or not you consider test blasts to represent the start of foundation work. A March 13 article in the New York Post says “this week,” whereas The New York Sun wrote that it would be “later this month” when workers begin “foundation work” following this week’s test blasts. Both papers were reporting on remarks made by developer Larry Silverstein during a speech at the New York Building
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Hadid Bags Fashionable Chanel Project

Josephine Minutillo
Josephine Minutillo
March 13, 2008
No Comments
  In a project that fuses fashion, art, and architecture, Zaha Hadid has created a moveable art space for the fashion house Chanel. Taking his cues from Mademoiselle Chanel herself—who supported Picasso, Jean Cocteau, Jacques Lipchitz, and other artists during her lifetime—Karl Lagerfeld, the company’s director of collections and ready-to-wear, gathered 20 international artists to collaborate with Chanel on unique art installations for the gallery. Officially opened yesterday in Hong Kong, the Mobile Art Pavilion, which resembles a space capsule, will touch down for one to two months at a time over the next two years in Tokyo, London, Moscow,
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Koolhaas Unveils New Waterfront City in Dubai

Dianna Dilworth
March 12, 2008
No Comments
Known for its outlandish architecture and oversized projects, Dubai is about to get its biggest development yet with a new 34,435-acre urban district slated to house as many as 1.5 million people. Rem Koolhaas’s Rotterdam-based Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) is creating the master plan for Waterfront City, a site on the western edge of Dubai that could become as big and as dense as Manhattan. Images © Office for Metropolitan Architecture A rendering of Waterfront City in Dubai showing OMA’s own signature, spherical building (top).  An artificial, square-shaped island will be created by flooding parts of a coastal area;
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Input Sought on High-Performance Building Standard

James Murdock
March 12, 2008
No Comments
The first public review period, held last summer, generated more than 900 comments. Now a coalition of groups developing the Standard for the Design of High-Performance Green Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings, better known as Standard 189, is for a second time seeking input on a proposed code-enforceable language for sustainable buildings. Related Links: Groups Advance High-Performance StandardsSeeking Public Comment on Standard 189 The coalition developing Standard 189 includes the American Society of Heating Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), and the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA). Speaking with RECORD in January, ASHRAE
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High Society Outshines High Modernism

Alec Appelbaum
March 11, 2008
No Comments
When housing prices seemed like they’d never stop climbing, developers were using architects’ names as selling points—but now they’re finding that Hollywood, and royalty, lend a dependable air of glamour even in a down market. So when Brett Buehrer and Jeremiah O’Connor recently completed a litigation-strewn, rental-to-condominium conversion of Manhattan House, a Modernist apartment block on New York City’s chichi Upper East Side, they settled on marketing the building not as a masterpiece designed by Gordon Bunshaft but as the onetime home of Grace Kelly. Photo © James Murdock (top); courtesy Rubenstein Public Relations (above); courtesy Rubenstein Public Relations (right).
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Will Downsizing McMansions Fatten Architects' Wallets?

Ted Smalley Bowen
March 10, 2008
No Comments
In a ruling that could help bolster the enforcement of zoning ordinances that cap house size, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court recently upheld the authority of local communities to restrict overbuilding. Although the case is one of a handful around the nation to take up the issue so far, interest in smart growth and sustainability is increasingly focusing regulators’ attention on house size—and this could ultimately accrue to the benefit of architects. “It’s a very telling sign that the court is addressing the significance of mansionization,” says Lora Lucero, a staff attorney with the American Planning Association. “The justices focused on the
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News Highlights of the Week: March 1 ' March 7, 2008

James Murdock
March 7, 2008
No Comments
Czech-born architect Jan Kaplický, whose British office Future Systems won the design competition for a new National Library in Prague, is threatening to pull out of the project, according to a March 4 article in the Prague Daily Monitor. Chosen in March 2007, Kaplicky’s scheme for the $183.5 million project has earned the evocative monikers “the blob” and “the octopus.” It calls for a bulbous, gold-tinted volume with round windows to rise in a neighborhood of more traditional, older buildings—a funky look that some observers think is too funky. Prague’s mayor, who initially appeared to endorse the project, feels that
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