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The Musée Picasso Reopens in Paris

Wendy Moonan
November 19, 2014
No Comments
Jean-Francois Bodin’s unassuming but arduous renovation of the beloved museum finally reaches completion.  Jean-Francois Bodin is probably the most talented architect you have never heard of.He avoids publicity. His website is “in formation” though he opened his firm, Bodin and Associates, in 1983. He is modest to a fault. His spartan offices are located, with no sign, off of a nondescript 17th-century courtyard in the Marais section of Paris. He works around the corner from the neighborhood where he was born, grew up, and just spent the last five years reconfiguring the Musée Picasso, a quiet triumph of a
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After 17 Years, Piano's Overhauled Harvard Art Museums Open

James S. Russell, FAIA Emeritus
November 19, 2014
No Comments
The Harvard Art Museums, during renovation and expansion, showing the new addition. From Quincy Street, you would never know that the overhauled Harvard University Art Museums, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, lurks behind the puritanically aloof facade of the neo-Georgian Fogg Museum. Even the long boxy volume of Renzo Piano’s addition, which hoists itself one-story above Prescott Street, behind the rear of the Fogg, doesn’t fully disclose its size, even with showy glass cubes poking out at either end. The Fogg is now just one of three merged collections that opened November 16. To accommodate a daunting array of competing programmatic agendas
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Palm Springs Art Museum Branches Out

Fred A. Bernstein
November 18, 2014
No Comments
Marmol Radziner has restored and adapted E. Stewart Williams' 1961 Santa Fe Federal Savings & Loan building for its use as a museum. If you’re looking for local heroes, there are several in Palm Springs with the name Williams. E. Stewart Williams (1909-2005) was an Ohio-born architect who moved to the desert town in 1946, and within a year had designed a house for Frank Sinatra, converting the singer to modernism. During the next four decades, Williams, practicing with his brother and father as Williams, Williams and Williams or, as the locals called it, Williams Cubed, designed dozens of buildings
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LEED Adds Social Equity Credits to Rating System

David Sokol
November 17, 2014
No Comments
If sustainability is a three-legged stool of environmental, economic, and social performance, then LEED is a bit wobbly: historically, the rating system has not taken on community welfare with the same breadth and depth as it has climate change and resource conservation. “It’s not as if social-equity benefit was absent from LEED,” says U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) vice president of LEED Brendan Owens, citing how power-plant emissions disproportionately impact marginalized communities. “But we knew we could do more.” To begin righting the imbalance, USGBC posited social equity as one of seven system goals for LEED v4, and formed a
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Newsmaker: Suzanne Drake

Zachary Edelson
November 17, 2014
No Comments
Perkins+Will maintains a Precautionary List, an index of building materials that can harm the human body. While mercury and lead’s impacts may be well understood, those of one ubiquitous set of chemicals have not been: flame-retardant chemicals. They are common in many architectural materials, from upholstery to insulation, and they slow the spread of fire in otherwise flammable substances. However, they also tend to escape into the environment and become absorbed in the human body, where they don’t break down. What results is a “body burden”: a cache of chemicals that has been linked to cancer, loss of IQ, and
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Market Focus: Higher-Education Construction

Data from McGraw Hill Dodge Analytics
Data from
November 15, 2014
No Comments
Construction activity in the higher-education sector is beginning to slowly rebound as the stock market improves and college and university endowments, along with gifts from alumni and other benefactors, grow. Click the image above to view a full presentation of these stats [PDF].
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The Mouse That Roared

Fred A. Bernstein
November 14, 2014
No Comments
During this season of Michael Graves, the architect's work is being celebrated in exhibitions and is the subject of a daylong symposium. Michael Graves Denver Central Library Assessing the legacy of Michael Graves is no small task. During a 50-year career, Graves has completed so many projects that the current retrospective at Grounds for Sculpture (an indoor-outdoor art park near Trenton, New Jersey) requires several buildings. Some parts of the exhibition are organized by decade—starting with the all-white houses of the 1970s and ending with the anything-but-white buildings of recent decades; others are arranged by category (toasters alone could fill
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Smithsonian Unveils BIG's Master Plan

Fred A. Bernstein
November 13, 2014
No Comments

BIG's concept includes a lawn between the Smithsonian’s historic Castle and Independence Avenue that curls upward at its corners.


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Newsmaker: Tom Bassett, Director of "Briefly" Film

Dante Ciampaglia
Dante A. Ciampaglia
November 12, 2014
No Comments
The film crew, including Bassett (center) talks to John Boiler, CEO of 72andSunny, a design and advertising agency. By day the CEO of design and brand strategy firm Bassett & Partners, Tom Bassett moonlights as an occasional filmmaker. His first film, the 18-minute Connecting released in 2012, was co-produced by Microsoft Design and focused on the “Internet of Things.” His latest work is more ambitious. Briefly, a 26-minute film released for free online last month that explores how some uber-creatives work with, bend, manipulate, and subvert the document that kicks it all off—the project brief—to accomplish great end products. “We
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Sarasota Scrambles to Save its Unique Brand of Regional Modernism

Cara Greenberg
November 12, 2014
No Comments
Paul Rudolph's Sarasota High School—a boldly conceived 1958-60 addition to an older building, with folded concrete planes that emphasize the play of light and shadow—is being restored. Sarasota’s preservation community is feeling the pressure. With no ironclad protections in place, the Gulf Coast Florida city—which, thanks largely to Paul Rudolph, who maintained a presence there from 1941 until 1962, became an epicenter of architectural ingenuity—is in a race to save what’s left of its repository of significant mid-20th century homes, schools, and churches. Among the fallen: Rudolph’s elegant, skeletal steel Riverview High School, designed in 1958 and demolished, after an
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