A Brutalist Acropolis in the Great White North: Simon Fraser University

Looking at Burnaby through the eyes of Canadian architect Arthur Erickson.

The Best Architecture of 2015: Their Modesty Becomes Them

Invisible architecture.

The Goodsill Residence

Honolulu architect Vladimir Ossipoff.

Architects Ernest and Esther Born’s work: lessons in urban design

I don’t entirely agree with King’s assessment of the Borns. Although the public housing in North Beach was run down when it was replaced it had some aesthetic merits. What

Concrete in Paradise: The East-West Center at the University of Hawaii

A collection of buildings on the campus of the University of Hawaii at Manoa designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect I.M. Pei.

A Filtered View #3: Socially Progressive, Architecturally Conservative: A San Francisco Paradox

This is the third in a new series of musings by San Francisco-based architect Charles F. Bloszies, FAIA.

Oscar Niemeyer Through the Lens of Haruo Mikami

Oscar Niemeyer’s most important works in Brasília through the eyes of architectural photographer, Haruo Mikami.

Should We Save Mid-Century Modern Icons That Hurt The Environment?

An important conversation.

Knoll Showrooms: 1951-1961

Archival photographs showcase a decade worth of work by Florence Knoll Bassett.

What should be done with Palace of Fine Arts? For starters, think big

Three contenders are in the running to restore and revive the century-old structure, but it’s hard to escape the feeling that the ideal solution is one that we haven’t yet

Crit > Petersen Automotive Museum

Inspired by automotive styling and aerodynamics, the Petersen Automotive Museum stops traffic on Wilshire Boulevard.

It Looks Like A 200-Year-Old Crumbling Home, But Inside It’s A Different Story

Buchner Bründler Architekten completed this unique restoration that basically involved building a home within a home. They left the exterior more or less untouched, and built a fresh interior shell

Heatherwick Studio to redesign the home of the New York Philharmonic at Lincoln Center

British designer Thomas Heatherwick has been chosen to lead the renovation of the Lincoln Center’s largest concert hall, the home of New York’s Philharmonic Orchestra.

Ten Things You Might Not Know About Charles and Ray Eames

As a major retrospective of the lauded designers’ work opens at the Barbican, we reveal ten little-known facts about their life and creative practice.

New Tower at the U.S. Air Force Academy

A recent addition threatens the integrity of Walter Netsch’s landmark campus.

How Stronger Cities Could Help Fix Fragile Nations

The most fragile states, which often breed terrorism, are also among the least urbanized.

CatalyticAction Designs Playgrounds for Refugee Children in Bar Elias, Lebanon

“Within humanitarian responses, programmatically, children often become invisible” (Marc Sommers). This project seeks to challenge this notion and expand the remit of what is deemed necessary in emergency situations.

The Jean Charlot Residence

A beautiful blend of historical and regional design, as adapted to a truly modernist aesthetic.

School Spirit

A revived Sproul Plaza complex supports student life and activities.

Kengo Kuma Exhibits Two Mobile Pavilions At Design Miami

Acclaimed Japanese architect Kengo Kuma has exhibited two mobile pavilions at the 2015 edition of Design Miami. Presented by the french gallery of Philippe Gravier, both structures seek to expand on

Yves Béhar-Backed Social Good Accelerator Reveals Inaugural Projects

The startups from Uganda, Kenya and Rwanda address a range of social issues that affect adolescent girls in their local communities.

Peter Zumthor Different Kinds of Silence

We visited Peter Zumthor – one of the world’s leading architects – in his studio in Switzerland. In this extensive and rare biographical video interview he tells the captivating story

How We Design Inequality

The editors of a new report on architecture and real estate discuss why affordability isn’t the solution to the housing crisis.

What It’s Like to Live in a Frank Lloyd Wright Home

It seems fitting an architect would be attracted to a Frank Lloyd Wright home, especially this dramatic design from 1950 with a steeply slanted red roof.