Carnegie Mellon University – Tepper School of Business David A. Tepper Quadrangle

Moore Ruble Yudell worked with Renaissance 3 Architects to complete the Tepper School of Business David A. Tepper Quadrangle as a gathering place for Carnegie Mellon University students.

Richard Saul Wurman

An interview with TED Founder and architect, Richard Saul Wurman.

The Magic is Back in Birmingham—Part One: Return to the Past

DBA principal, Amanda Loper on Birmingham.

Starlite Lounge, Brooklyn

Three takes on how New York’s queer nightlife spaces have evolved

Architects Newspaper broadens its coverage.

This Is an Indian House, According to One Architect

By turning his gaze backward, Bijoy Jain is creating a new architectural language that acknowledges his country’s past.

How Bauhaus Built India

Bauhaus came to India via two brilliant young architects, Achyut Kanvinde and Habib Rahman.

Where Was Jim Crow? Living in Frank Lloyd Wright’s America

Living in America: Frank Lloyd Wright, Harlem, and Modern Housing, on view through December 17 at the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery in Columbia University’s Lenfest Center for

The L.A. architects who design buildings that make you say, ‘Huh?,’ then ‘Wow!’

Johnston Marklee. One of my favorite firms right now.

Attempts to stop terrorism at the fringes of architecture are becoming increasingly useless.

Architects and designers can’t design ways to protect mass terror attacks in America’s public spaces, but they should join the fight to eliminate the problem at its cause.

With a $450 Million Expansion, MoMA Is Bigger. Is That Better?

Kimmelman weighs in on the new MoMA.

Who’s afraid of the pedestrian mall?

To make cities safer and denser, we need to make room for people, not cars. The specter of the 1970s is holding our foot traffic back.

Buzz Yudell reflects on the cosmic force of the late Charles Jencks

Pal Buzz Yudell writes about his good friend Charles Jencks.

Is designing for Instagram hurting design?

Pal Verda Alexander.

Ezra Stoller Turned Buildings Into Monuments

Pal Pierluigi Serraino’s new book on Ezra Stoller gets recognition in The New Yorker.

The World’s Largest Refugee Camp Is Becoming a Real City

A city of the displaced. The Kutupalong camp contains about 600,000 people in southern Bangladesh.

“In the age of big data, everything is quantifiable, even happiness”

Measuring people’s happiness with architecture is a step towards trying to control them, says Reinier de Graaf.

The Creative Process of the Four Pioneers of Modern Architecture

For our civilian pals?

Auf wiedersehen, Walter! Why Britain booted out the Bauhaus

Gropius and crew in the UK. On show at the RIBA, Beyond Bauhaus: Modernism in Britain 1933–66,

Henry Urbach Interview

In 2011, I interviewed Henry Urbach, then the head of architecture and design at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), about the museum’s ParaDesign show. We toured the