Mi casa es mi refugio: At the Service of Mexican Modernism in Casa Barragán

Another look at Barragan and his home.

This Is Not the End of Cities

Richard Florida weighs in. Both the coronavirus pandemic and the Black Lives Matter movement create opportunities to reshape cities in more equitable ways.

The Glass House project fosters literal and historical transparency at ‘Menokin’ ruins in Virginia

Preserving the ruins of a historic building in the US state of Virginia that was the home of Francis Lightfoot Lee — a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

Contract Multivitamin: Mindi Weichman of Studio O+A

A dose of designer musings in there own words.

Un-making ARCHITECTURE

An anti-racist architecture manifesto.

A new book argues Frederick Kiesler was the influencer at the center of american modernism

Kiesler.

ARO’s renovated Rothko Chapel set to reopen in September

The sacred art space will reopen to the public in September.

Design Disruption Explores High Density Housing with Moshe Safdie and Ma Yansong

This episode explores high density housing with guests Moshe Safdie, founder of Safdie Architects, and Ma Yansong, founder of MAD architects.

First U.S. Exhibition of Pritzker Prize-Winner Balkrishna Doshi to Open in September

BV Doshi exhibit in Chicago.

Architects Revamp Workplaces for Social Distancing

Pals Valerio Dewalt Train and Studio O + A are featured in this article by Lydia Lee.

Designers Share Their Creative Outlets During the Pandemic

A lot of joy here including a piece by pal Verda Alexander.

222 Taylor: Affordable Family Housing Takes Root in San Francisco’s Tenderloin

Our pals David Baker Architects.

Ralph Caplan, Design Critic Big on Sit-Ins but Not Chairs, Dies at 95

A writer, editor and consultant, his views on American product design allowed him to stray into a wide range of cultural issues, including the battle for civil rights.

Waking, If Not Yet Woke

O+A’s first banners. Black Lives Matter.

Museums Are Finally Taking a Stand. But Can They Find Their Footing?

As cultural institutions scramble to declare their support for Black Lives Matter, their gestures have felt both self-aggrandizing and too little too late.

Architecture schools send messages of solidarity to those protesting against police violence, racial injustice

Calling for an immediate end to racial injustice and the need for sweeping police reform.

America’s Cities Were Designed to Oppress

Architects and planners have an obligation to protect health, safety and welfare through the spaces we design. As the George Floyd protests reveal, we’ve failed.

Racism is built into U.S. cities. Here’s how architects can fight back

Police brutality and the coronavirus pandemic are two health crises that disproportionately impact black Americans. Architects, who take an oath to protect the “health, safety, and welfare” of the public,

There’s No Reason for an Architect to Design a Death Chamber

As the country grapples with racial justice, architects should finally take a stand on the most barbaric aspects of a biased prison system.

Chronicles of Modernism: uncovering the history of the Isokon Building, north London’s answer to the Bauhaus

The Isokon Building (or Lawn Road Flats), a trailblazing modernist structure, designed by architect Wells Coates, that became the epicentre of new-age radicalism in the 1930s and 1940s. One of

We need to address the prejudice and exploitation that underpin our national myths

Much of Britain’s wealth and heritage is a monument to black lives not mattering.

Hope

Dear Friends. We are not posting any articles this week. Some designers are working hard to help people prepare for returning to the workplace. Some architects are working hard to