Growing Up With Contract

Our pals at O + A remember Contract magazine.

Renewed hope for Cardross seminary after church finds new owner

A new owner has been found for Gillespie Kidd & Coia’s derelict 1967 St Peter’s Seminary in Cardross, near Helensburgh.

Tiffany Brown: Dismantle and Rebuild

The executive manager of the National Organization of Minority Architects describes why she is her “ancestors’ wildest dreams.”

Luis Barragán’s Forgotten Works, Revisited

After moving to Mexico City in 1935, the architect set about designing a series of obscure functionalist residences that he would later disown.

A Second Look at Edith Farnsworth and Her Mies van der Rohe–Designed Retreat

Mies van der Rohe’s Farnsworth House House with Edith’s furniture.

Anne Fougeron on Creating Good Urban Spaces and Being a Woman Architect

Pal Anne Fougeron!

Apple’s Bay Area affordable housing initiatives begin to take shape

As part of a $2.5 billion funding commitment made by computer giant Apple to help fund additional affordable housing initiatives, the company has allocated $400 million toward a series of

See inside the lost archive of celebrated Black architect Paul Williams

The archive, originally thought lost in a fire during the 1992 uprising in Los Angeles, sheds new light on Williams, who designed everything from airports to public housing to mansions

Can a City Be Feminist?

Upon the release today of her new book Feminist City, Leslie Kern catches up with Metropolis on how cities can be more equitable for all genders.

Is Architectural Licensing Necessary?

Pal John Parman weighs in on licensing and its complexities.

Celebrating Geoffrey Bawa’s delightful buildings and gardens on his 101st birthday

Always good to hear about Bawa and his work.

Imagining an Eco-Friendly Post-Pandemic Downtown

Radio post! Byron Kuth and Liz Ranieri discuss their visionary thinking for downtown San Francisco with Mel Baker of San Francisco Public Press.

The Japanese-American Sculptor Who, Despite Persecution, Made Her Mark

Seven years after her death, Ruth Asawa is finally being recognized as an American master. What can we learn from this overdue reappraisal?

Design Firms Share Their Office Reopening Strategies

Pals Studio O+A share their thoughts on reentering the workplace.

Status, Statues, and Statutes

The issue with monuments to flawed men.

The Pandemic and Protests Have Highlighted Just How Unequal Our Cities Are

With a new urban crisis surfacing, designers from around the world propose radical changes to transportation, cooperative living, working, and public space.

After All, Who Do We Build Architecture and Urbanism for?

What would all the built environments be without its users?

It’s time to rethink downtown SF. Here’s one of the most radical visions out there

Our pals Byron Kuth and Liz Ranieri of Kuth Ranieri Architects.

The Education—and Miseducation—of an Urban Planner

Urban planners.

Interior Design Magazine 2020 HiP Awards Winner: Elizabeth Vereker

Elizabeth Vereker from Studio O+A!

Brigid Berlin, Socialite Who Joined Warhol’s World, Dies at 80

Born into privilege, she rejected her upbringing to become a fixture on the New York underground art scene of the 1960s and ’70s.

Affordable Housing in COVID Times: A Q&A with San Francisco Architect David Baker

The pandemic’s financial impact could be devastating, but for Baker, it’s the right time to tackle the city’s housing shortage.

Column: A different view of the masterful Farnsworth House — hers, not his

Even it isn’t Mies she (Dr. Edith Farnsworth) had great taste.

Can Quarantine Propel Us Toward Planetary Sanctuary?

Mimi Zeiger on quarantine.

Deem, a new journal, wants design to focus back on people

A new design journal about what matters.

Remember that Public Space is Democracy’s Great Stage

Making public spaces unwelcome is a perversion of their purpose, writes ASLA president Wendy Miller in this op-ed. Too often over the past few weeks, the central promise of the