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The Architect's Newspaper is the most authoritative voice on architecture, urbanism, and design in the U.S. Header: Portland International Airport, ZGF
New York
Joined February 2009
BIG alternates balcony types to form the jagged, illusory Kaktus Towers in Copenhagen.
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The Poetic Dimension brings together photographs by James Casebere and sculptures by Jose Dávila. Though their practices unfold in very different media, the artists meet in their engagement with the work of Mexican modernist Luis Barragán.
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This fall promises a whirlwind of new building openings, with firms shaping (and reshaping!) cultural landmarks around the world, including Calder Gardens in Philadelphia and Donald Judd's Architecture Office in Texas.
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Curling vines, blooming roses, and leaves once fragments of patterns in an archive of sketches, tracings, and unfinished repetitions by William Morris have been brought to light for the first time in The Unfinished Works, a new Morris & Co. collection.
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The redevelopment of the Teatown Lake Reservation’s campus, includes a new 5400-square-foot Education Center, a renovation of Teatown’s historic Nature Center, and a broader reconfiguration of the preserve’s campus by nArchitects and Starr Whitehouse.
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Abramson Architects has merged with global design firm Perkins&Will, uniting their LA and San Diego studios. The new Southern California practice will focus on adaptive reuse, housing, healthcare, and cultural projects.
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Six projects are in the running for the 2025 RIBA Stirling Prize—including a restored Elizabeth Tower, new labs for AstraZeneca, and two small London homes. The winner will be announced October 16 at the Roundhouse, London.
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The fifth Exhibit Columbus brings 13 community-focused installations to Columbus, Indiana, exploring the theme "Yes And" through pavilions, sound systems, historic sites, and playful public spaces.
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Twenty years after Katrina, New Orleans’s City Park looks ahead. The new City Park 2050 plan prioritizes resilience over reinvention—restoring ecosystems, repairing civic anchors, and preparing the park for a changing climate.
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The AIA has issued a response opposing the executive order (EO) shared last week by the White House effectively mandating classical and traditional architectural design for federal buildings.
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A new 12-acre green space has been built over an asphalt parking lot in the heart of Lexington, Kentucky. The site was once a sea of cars and now it features over 450 trees, thousands of native and adapted plantings.
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The 2025 Aga Khan Award for Architecture winners were announced. The winning projects hail from Bangladesh, China, Egypt, Iran, Pakistan, and Palestine and span a range of building typologies.
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BIG alternates balcony types to form the jagged, illusory Kaktus Towers in Copenhagen.
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4
BIG alternates balcony types to form the jagged, illusory Kaktus Towers in Copenhagen.
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1
4
The Poetic Dimension brings together photographs by James Casebere and sculptures by Jose Dávila. Though their practices unfold in very different media, the artists meet in their engagement with the work of Mexican modernist Luis Barragán.
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What is happening at Fulton, Elliott, and Chelsea is not just about three campuses, however. It’s about the future of public housing in New York—and by extension, the future of the city itself, writes Viren Brahmbhatt in an op-ed.
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Curling vines, blooming roses, and leaves once fragments of patterns in an archive of sketches, tracings, and unfinished repetitions by William Morris have been brought to light for the first time in The Unfinished Works, a new Morris & Co. collection.
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An ambitious program shepherded by the District of Columbia Housing Authority (DCHA) to overhaul 19 public housing is underway in Washington D.C. The DCHA announced earlier this summer its plans to improve 3,500 of its approximate 8,000 units.
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The redevelopment of the Teatown Lake Reservation’s campus, includes a new 5400-square-foot Education Center, a renovation of Teatown’s historic Nature Center, and a broader reconfiguration of the preserve’s campus by nArchitects and Starr Whitehouse.
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Abramson Architects has merged with global design firm Perkins&Will, uniting their LA and San Diego studios. The new Southern California practice will focus on adaptive reuse, housing, healthcare, and cultural projects.
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