The stories of Harriet Pattison, landscape architect and companion of Louis Kahn

Harriet Pattison’s life and work.

Inside the Proposed Changes to the Landmarked Ford Foundation

A look inside the revered postmodern office tower with Ford Foundation president Darren Walker.

Robert Irwin’s Light-Filled Moment

Now 87, the artist expands on his visionary work with architecture, unveiling two new installations at the Hirshhorn Museum and Chinati Foundation.

The First Modern Couple

Alvar Aalto and Aino Marsio.

What is the Future for Architecture and Design at MoMA?

More on yet another MoMA fiasco.

Leawood Speculative Office / El Dorado

A speculative office to attract high-tech companies.

Dallas architecture is a joke (but it doesn’t have to be)

Pseudo-contemporary blocks has become the de facto standard of Dallas residential architecture development (but it doesn’t have to be).

Stanley Anderson Interviews Celia Bertoia (Part I)

Stanley Anderson interviews Celia Bertoia.  

A ’60s Architecture Collective That Made History (but No Buildings)

Italy’s legendary radical design group Superstudio never actually finished a building, and yet its hallucinogenic visions are still making waves.

Touring Marcel Breuer’s Bronx Community College Campus, a Hidden NYC Gem

More Breuer. More Alexandra Lange!

Review: The restored Met Breuer (formerly the Whitney) has a new energy as well as a lived-in look

Christopher Hawthorne on the Met Breuer.

Geographies of Uncertainty: Space and Territory in the Operational Logic of UPS

The United Parcel Service (UPS) resiliency and acute performance within the tides of uncertainty.

After Zaha, The Pritzker Chooses Civics Over Style

More than a decade after Zaha Hadid’s win, architecture’s biggest prize has shifted away from the world she built.

Bertjan Pot Uses NIKE’s Flyknit Technology And Tire Tubes To Create Furniture

At NIKE’s ‘the nature of motion’ event for Milan Design Week 2016, German designer Bertjan Pot experiments with materials, techniques, structures, patterns and colors, which leads him to surpass conventional

Can the Wired City Also Be the Equitable One?

The application of SMART technology in cities will weed out tremendous inefficiencies, and everyone should benefit. But eventually, those collective inefficiencies will be overcome, and individual gains will require others

The Lousy Urban Design Of America’s Most Innovative Companies

Why do tech companies keep building suburban corporate campuses that are isolated from the communities their products are meant to serve?

It’s Just So Wrong – Part 3

Man Buns I am not the first to criticize this unfortunate fashion trend. But I will add my voice to the throngs. Men don’t look good with hair buns. There

Inside Tadao Ando’s Self-Built Studio In Osaka

Self-taught architect Tadao ando set up his own practice in 1969. Since then, he has completed over 200 buildings and was awarded the Pritzker architecture prize in 1995. On the occasion

Vladimir Kagan, Esteemed Furniture Designer, Dies at 88

Throughout his enormously successful career that spanned over six decades, connoisseurs, museums, and other artistic luminaries avidly sought his work.

Camp Code

How to navigate a refugee settlement.

How West Elm Became An Unlikely Incubator Of Independent Design

Through the Local program, West Elm is supporting independent designers—and building its own brand to boot.

Zaha Hadid, Friend

Architect and critic Joseph Giovannini remembers the wonderful force of nature known as Zaha Hadid.

SF skyline’s new LinkedIn addition is built by, for New Yorkers

The newcomer serves as a cautionary tale showing what can happen when out-of-town developers and architects have their own vision of what a city like San Francisco should be.

An Artist’s Tribute to Creatives Who Died From AIDS

For the past year, the interior designer and artist Doug Meyer has created 50 “portraits” — busts, statuettes, intaglios, multimedia sculptures — of creative people who died of AIDS and

Zaha Hadid, 1950-2016

Remembering early drawings from the start of Zaha Hadid’s career, Aaron Betsky recalls her journey into the realm of spatial continuity.

The Social Art of Zaha Hadid, Architecture’s Most Engaging Presence

The architect, whose designs sought to engage with the public around them, broadened what was possible with the form.