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Home » Authors » Clifford A. Pearson
Clifford A. Pearson

Clifford A. Pearson

Contributing editor Clifford Pearson is the co-author, with A. Eugene Kohn, of The World By Design, and writes about architecture and urbanism.

Articles

ARTICLES

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Ninth Mundaneum Conference Takes Place in Managua, Nicaragua

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
October 27, 2015
No Comments

In presenting their work, a number of speakers at the ninth Mundaneum conference on architecture charted personal journeys of finding their professional voices. These tales included moments of doubt and self-criticism, along with humor and discovery.


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Highpark, Mexico

Highpark

Open House: A luxury apartment building with restaurants and shops on the ground floor invites the neighbors to drop over and relax.
Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
October 16, 2015
No Comments

When Michel Rojkind calls Highpark “extroverted,” you might think, “It takes one to know one.” An exuberant character, the Mexico City–based architect is rarely at a loss for words or enthusiasm. His new housing project in Monterrey, a major industrial and business center in northeast Mexico, shares his outgoing personality—engaging its urban context and striking an animated profile on the street. 


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Shanghai Tower

Twist and Shout: China's tallest building puts a new spin on high-rise design and asserts itself in a cluster of giants.
Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
October 16, 2015
No Comments

In their race to the top, supertall buildings are always in competition with each other.


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Sherber + Rad

Sherber + Rad

Surface Tension: A progression of materials from rough poplar bark to smooth bronze panels takes clients through a storefront shop to the inner sanctum of a dermatologist and a plastic surgeon.
Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
September 16, 2015
No Comments

Beauty may be skin-deep, but David Jameson's design for the offices of a dermatologist and a plastic surgeon reaches beneath the surface, peeling back layers of intrigue. Inspired by the structure of a tree'with its rough bark on the outside and smoother rings closer to the core' the Washington, D.C.'based architect organized the 3,770-square-foot facility as a progression of spaces wrapped in increasingly refined materials. 


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Bridging the Urban-Rural Divide

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
August 14, 2015
No Comments
A symposium and exhibition in China explore ways of rethinking the countryside.  Nan Xiao, Qingyun Ma, and Gary Paige at the symposium. Every year about a million people in China move from rural villages and towns to big cities. Lots of planning efforts—both good and bad—have focused on fast-growing cities, but very little work has looked at the countryside where depopulation and the changing economics of farming threaten the very existence of many villages. With that as a backdrop, the University of Southern California’s American Academy in China (AAC) and its School of Architecture addressed the urban-rural divide in
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21c Museum Hotel by Deborah Berke Partners

Durham, North Carolina
Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
July 16, 2015
No Comments
A hotel in a renovated commercial building draws guests with contemporary art and Southern charm in Durham, North Carolina.
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Following Ando to the Inland Sea

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
June 26, 2015
No Comments
New projects by Sou Fujimoto and Hiroshi Sambuichi add to the cultural attractions on Naoshima Island. Sou Fujimoto's new waterfront pavilion. On Naoshima, the 3.15-square-mile island in Japan’s Seto Inland Sea that Tadao Ando and other architects have turned into a popular station on the art-world pilgrimage route, the projects keep coming. In March, Sou Fujimoto completed a metal-mesh pavilion on the waterfront that lures visitors and local residents to climb inside its faceted form, while Hiroshi Sambuichi has designed a community center that will serve as a venue for Bunraku, a traditional form of Japanese puppetry, when it opens
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Foster Unfazed by WTC Ouster

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
Anna Fixsen
June 11, 2015
No Comments

When news that Norman Foster’s design for 2 World Trade Center would be swapped in favor of a more eccentric scheme by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), speculation as to the reasons stacked up as high as the glazed volumes in the elected design.


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Whitney Museum of American Art by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

New York City
Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
May 16, 2015
No Comments
After failed attempts to add on to its iconic uptown venue, the Whitney builds a new home in Manhattan that reaches out to its neighbors.
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Open Book

Cliff P
Clifford A. Pearson
March 1, 2015
No Comments
Photo © BC architects & studies Using soil from the site for compressed-earth blocks, and local stones for mortarless walls helps anchor the 1,500-square-foot building to its physical and cultural context. Library of MuyingaMuyinga, BurundiBC architects & studies The first phase of a school for deaf children, the 1,500-square-foot Library of Muyinga, in northeast Burundi, combines inexpensive local materials with a modern approach to design. 'It's an architecture of low resources,' says Laurens Bekemans, who with partners Wes Degreef, Nicolas Coeckelberghs, and Ken De Cooman started the Brussels-based BC architects & studies (BC-AS) in 2011 as they were all graduating
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