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Home » Topics » Architecture News

Architecture News
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The New Frontier in Education

David Hill
March 1, 2012
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Photo ' Rob Pyatt University of Colorado students will design housing for the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Click on the slide show button to view images of projects by architecture students at additional schools. Yale graduate students have been required to design a low-income house since 1967. This dwelling, at 12 King Place, was built in 2010. Related Links: University of Colorado Students to Design and Build Native American Housing ARCHIVE House Aims to Curb Disease Through Design DesignBuildBLUFF: Drawing on two-by-fours Teaching By Example Like a lot of architects and architecture students these days, Nathan Hammitt believes design has
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Memoir: My Dacca Days

James Walden
March 1, 2012
One Comment
Photo courtesy James Walden In the archival photo above, Walden is the teacher standing in the background. Photo courtesy James Walden In the 1960s, James Walden and two colleagues started an architecture school in East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, as part of a USAID initiative. He recently returned to give a keynote address at the school's 50th-anniversary celebration. Starting an architecture school in a developing country was not part of my life plan when I launched my career more than half a century ago. Yet in 1960, five years after graduating from Texas A&M University with a B.Arch. and three years
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Forecast 2012: Office Construction

Data from
March 1, 2012
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This month, Architectural Record introduces a new column featuring McGraw-Hill Dodge's construction-economics intelligence. To start things off, we're looking at the office-building market. Click the image below to view our latest data. Source: McGraw-Hill Dodge Analytics Click the image above to view a full presentation of these stats [PDF].
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Over $1.5 Billion in Service

John Cary
March 1, 2012
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Architects Tapped for Series of Salvation Army Community Centers, Thanks to Generous Joan Kroc Donation. Photo © Halkin Photography MGA Partners designed the Salvation Army Ray and Joan Kroc Corps Community Center in Philadelphia. When Joan Kroc died in 2003, she willed the bulk of her estate, $1.5 billion, to the Salvation Army'the single-largest charitable gift in history, according to some accounts. Two years earlier, the widow of McDonald's founder Ray Kroc had worked with the nonprofit organization to build a Salvation Army community center in San Diego designed by AVRP Studios. Joan Kroc, who had contributed $90 million to
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Saving Johansen's Stage Center

David Hill
February 28, 2012
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After a period of neglect, efforts have grown to rescue the Oklahoma City theater that Harvard Five architect John Johansen considers his masterwork. Click on the slide show button to view additional images. In Oklahoma City, John Johansen’s 1970 Mummers Theater has long been one of those love-it-or-hate-it buildings. Now called the Stage Center, the structure is a whimsical assemblage of brutalist concrete forms and brightly colored steel ramps. Hovering above it all are three corrugated metal boxes containing the building’s mechanical systems. A member of the Harvard Five, Johansen, now 95, called the theater “not a building as we
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Announcement: Record Honors SOM and Haworth

February 28, 2012
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Photo © Skydeck Chicago Related Links:Good Design is Good Business The symbiotic relationship between business and design will be recognized on March 9 at the American Architectural Foundation’s Accent on Architecture Gala at the stately Mellon Auditorium in Washington, D.C. Architectural Record will present its first Good Design is Good Business Lifetime Achievement Awards to Skidmore, Owings & Merrill for architecture and to Haworth for its patronage of design excellence. The Ledge at Skydeck Location: Chicago Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
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Chinese Architect Wang Shu Wins the 2012 Pritzker Prize

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
February 27, 2012
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Wang Shu, a 48-year-old Chinese architect whose work explores the intersection of modern technologies and traditional sensibilities, has won the 2012 Pritzker Architecture Prize, announced Thomas J. Pritzker, chairman of The Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the prize. Wang is the 37th person to win the prize and the first from China.


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A Temporary Fix

Asad Syrkett
February 23, 2012
No Comments
Pop-up architecture helps boost spirits in earthquake-devastated Christchurch. Re:START is constructed of colorful, stacked shipping containers.  Related Links: In Quake-Ravaged Christchurch, Ban's Cardboard Cathedral Ready for Groundbreaking One year after a 6.3-magnitude earthquake struck Christchurch, New Zealand, killing 185 people, much of the city still lies in disarray. The central business district remains restricted to the public, with guards standing sentry at access points. Within this “red zone,” innumerable residential and public buildings have been earmarked for partial or complete demolition, including the iconic, Gothic Revival Christchurch Cathedral, whose 19th-century spire and tower sustained heavy damage. New Zealand economists speculate
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In Quake-Ravaged Christchurch, Ban’s Cardboard Cathedral Ready for Groundbreaking

Naomi Pollock, FAIA
February 22, 2012
No Comments
A concept model of Ban’s scheme for the Cardboard Cathedral.  Related Links: New Zealand Herald: Interview with Head of Earthquake Recovery Authority Shigeru Ban Conceives Simple Solutions for Post-Disaster Zones in New Zealand, Japan A year after a 6.3-magnitude earthquake left Christchurch’s central business district in shambles, Shigeru Ban’s Cardboard Cathedral is ready to start construction. Dividing his time between offices in Tokyo, Paris, and New York, Ban has a stellar track record for helping when natural disasters strike. This time, his pro-bono contribution is a temporary replacement for the New Zealand city’s main Anglican house of worship, a 19th-century
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First Look: David Schwarz Plays Vegas

Fred A. Bernstein
February 22, 2012
No Comments
With the Smith Center for the Performing Arts in Las Vegas, David Schwarz brings an earnest take on a historical style to the capital of pastiche. The Smith Center for the Performing Arts by David M. Schwarz Architects  The Smith Center neighbors Frank Gehry's Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health. These days, Las Vegas is best known for its themed casinos (Luxor, Paris, New York, New York) and their intentionally cartoonish buildings. Architects tend to be appalled. In that context, it’s easy to dismiss the Smith Center for the Performing Arts as another ersatz vision for Las Vegas. Unlike the
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