A Love-Hate Relationship

Results of the Architectural Record/Van Alen Institute Design Competition Survey are in.

How Urban Planning Failed Kathmandu

Haphazard urbanization and rampant building code violations in Nepal pushed up the earthquake death toll.

Q+A: Public Architecture Founder John Peterson

Peterson was named the new Loeb Fellowship curator at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, but even though he’s moving across the country for the new position, he will remain

Editorial > Design Orgs Need To Meet The Street

William Menking urges design organizations to keep their street side presence to better engage the public.  

AD Classics: German Pavilion, Expo ’67 / Frei Otto and Rolf Gutbrod

I remember it like yesterday.

How Legendary Illustrator Maira Kalman Stays Creative

We caught up with the whimsical illustrator about productivity, creativity and why her spirit animal is a “tiny, delusional bird.”  

The Craig Ellwood Bobertz Residence: a Man And His House

With no formal training in architecture, design or landscape solutions, Keith York(the current owner of the Craig Ellwood Bobertz house) never foresaw becoming a devoted proponent of all three in

Whitetail Woods Regional Park Camper Cabins

Nestled into the hillside of a new regional park within the Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area, three new camper cabins – built by county employees with the aid of high school

The 7 Lamps of Architecture Criticism

What is the “serious criticism” of architecture?

AIA Announces 2015 Housing Awards

Check out David Baker’s Bayview Hill Gardens affordable housing and the other great 2015 Architect magazine Housing Awards

Florida’s Mecca for Midcentury Modernism Welcomes a New Center for Architecture

The newly renovated Center for Architecture Sarasota opened last month in a 1960 Sarasota Modern landmark, which was once a furniture store.

How Midcentury Architect Gregory Ain Mixed Social Responsibility With Great Design

Many architects pay lip service to the idea that good design can and should ennoble the lives of average people not blessed with bountiful wealth.

Will S.F.’s Market Street Be Redesigned Into a Place for Play?

Arena/Play, as the installation was called, was one of the hits of last week’s Market Street Prototyping Festival, a three-day trial run of more than 50 projects vying to become

The New Whitney Marks a Change in Museum Design

The Whitney Museum reopens on May 1 in a vast space designed to wow artists as much as audiences.

Vitra and G-star RAW Present Prouvé RAW Office Edition

Jean Prouvé is considered one of the most important designers and engineers of the 20th century. During the 2015 Salone Del Mobile, Vitra and G-star RAW debut the limited Prouvé

The Golden Ratio: Design’s Biggest Myth

In the world of art, architecture, and design, the golden ratio has earned a tremendous reputation. It’s bullshit.

Build Up or Build Out? Spoiler Alert: The Answer is Neither

The world’s population is going through the proverbial roof, set to surpass 9.5 billion by 2050.

The Sea Ranch at 50

An Earthly Paradise: In planning, design, and sustainability, the Sea Ranch, now 50 years old, was far ahead of its time.

The Met Breuer Opens March 2016

The Metropolitan Museum of Art announces its inaugural programming at the former Whitney Museum of American Art building designed by Marcel Breuer.  

Shulman Home & Studio (Raphael Soriano/Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects)

Picture Perfect: A photographer’s midcentury house, little changed over the decades, is sensitively restored for a young family.

The Style of Substance

A look at recent work from Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects | Partners and an exploration into what makes the firm so special.

Roote Angles Two-Storey Family Residence On An Inclined Plot In Japan

Positioned on an inclined tract in the Japanese city of Fukuoka, Roote Architects has completed a timber-clad family residence.

Suit Filed to Save Paul Rudolph’s Orange County Government Center

As preparations to demolish part of Paul Rudolph’s Orange County Government Center continued, lawyer Michael Sussman awaited his day in court.

Talking to the Man Who Introduced Danish Modern Design to America

A talk with furniture designer, Jens Risom.

Little-Known Legends from the Bauhaus

A special exhibition at the Bauhaus-Archiv celebrates the museum’s newest acquisitions.

8 Projects That Showcase African Innovation

Although the Western media tends to focus on the humanitarian side of architecture in Africa, the continent is home to amazing design of all varieties.