The Lost Poetry Of The Angel Island Detention Center

Poetry as resistance.

New York’s Vast Flop

A long read but worth it.

Homeless people have found safety in a library – but locals want them gone

Where design and social policy come together.

Deep in Brazil’s Amazon, Exploring the Ruins of Ford’s Fantasyland

Fordlândia, Brazil, a community founded in 1928 by Henry Ford.

On a Design Mission in Mississippi

Holmes County is among the poorest counties in the nation, plagued by age-old systematic racism, with a population (18,340) that has been declining for more than a half-century. Holmes didn’t

On Race And Architecture

Facing the design profession’s diversity problem—and it’s changing future.

Phyllis Lambert looks back on her 75 years in architecture

Phyllis Lambert: 75 Years At Work, on view until April 9 at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal.

The President Who Mistook His Wife For A Drape

Our astute new President got his priorities absolutely right on his first day in office, even before he John Hancocked his first executive order. He hung gold drapes behind his

Closings

When you spend most of our life in one area, you get attached to familiar retail shops and restaurants, even if you rarely enter them. They are anchors for memory,

It’s Time for Leaders in Architecture and Design to Step Up and Join the Resistance

Architects have tremendous power.

Confessions of a Former Design Magazine Editor

Spoken and unspoken ground rules by Martin C. Pedersen.

The Winners of the 64th Progressive Architecture Awards

The jury recognized 12 projects in the 2017 program.

Selgascano Fills Second Home Lisbon Creative Incubator With 1,000 Plants

Sharing the same building as the Mercado da Ribeira – Lisbon’s oldest food market – is ‘second home Lisboa’, the Portuguese capital’s latest creative co-working space to open.

Emory University to replace a remarkable John Portman building with a new campus center

In the early 1980s Emory University picked an architect with an oppositional style—Portman—to design its campus center and largest dining hall. Now they will knock it down. 

Reality in the Balance

The era of Trump and Brexit is opening up new obligations, new opportunities, for architectural activism that blends the professional and the political.

It’s Time for a New Definition of Architectural Beauty

By Graham McKay.

Life After Death? Resurrecting A Modern Ruin

St Peter’s Seminary was built only 50 years ago, yet by the 1990s it was derelict. However, plans to breathe new life into the building are now close to being

Postcard from Washington and New York: Stitch. March. Look. Listen. Repeat.

Pink now means the resistance.

New Retrospective Glimpses the Man Behind the Maison de Verre

A new exhibition at the Jewish Museum in New York City rescues the French avant-garde architect and designer from obscurity.

Marion Greenwood: A Modern Woman in Modern Mexico

The legacy of Marion Greenwood.

Immigration Ban Rocks Architecture Community

President Donald Trump’s executive order temporarily bans citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries.

Rethinking the Refugee Camp

Architects have long been celebrated for their innovative designs for disaster relief housing. But there’s a better response to the refugee crisis.

The forgotten history of Japanese-American designers’ World War II internment

Revisiting the link between detention and design history, 75 years after FDR’s executive order.

Watch the award-winning IKEA refugee shelter being assembled

IKEA continues to do its part in highlighting the increasing number of people being displaced internationally. This time-lapse video shows the shelter assembled in 2 minutes.

A Housing Crisis for Seniors

Every day for the next 19 years, 10,000 people will reach age 65.