Deem Journal Is The New Magazine Centering Design as a Social Practice

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Gómez Platero unveils design for world’s first large-scale memorial to the victims of COVID-19

“World Memorial to the Pandemic”

Beauty and destruction: Beirut’s design community struggles to rebuild in the aftermath of explosions

With dozens of historic buildings and modern high rises in ruin following the Beirut blast of August 4, the Lebanese vow to rebuild what is left of their great city.

Remembering legendary Brazilian modernist Jorge Zalszupin (1922-2020)

Retracing the ‘succession of miracles’ from Jorge Zalszupin, an icon of Brazilian design who has passed away at age 98.

LA Sprawl

Whack-a-Mole Urban Planning in Los Angeles Is Not Working

Los Angeles’ persistent urban challenges: affordable housing, equity injustices, gentrification, traffic, air pollution, climate change.

Rethinking the Architecture of a Racist Legal System

With the conversation on race and justice coming to the forefront, it’s worth thinking through how architecture can contribute to change.

Post-COVID, More Office Designs Include Permanent Outdoor Workspaces

Designers are building zones with the WiFi, power, and shading elements for conducting tasks and meetings entirely outdoors.

Bad design kills: Why COVID-19 spread like wildfire at one of America’s worst prisons

Poorly designed architecture has exacerbated the spread of COVID-19 at San Quentin, where more than two-thirds of inmates have been infected.

Column: Mies van der Rohe’s workhorse tower gets a vibrant remake as a dorm at Chicago’s Illinois Institute of Technology

Master modernist Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.

An Image of Our Post-Covid Future

Aaron Betsky on how a photograph from the protests in Detroit can serve as a guidebook for the profession.

Honesty’s Black Hole: A lifetime of watching presidential elections

How did we get to the point of expecting that every single thing the president of the United States utters is a lie? Growing up as a privileged white male,

Interview with Walter Hood on History and Race in Landscape Design

Cathleen McGuigan interviews Walter Hood about his forthcoming book, Black Landscapes Matter (written with Grace Mitchell Tada), and how his design work increasingly is inspired by his identity as a

Jones and Emmons: Modernism for the Las Vegas Masses

For you A. Quincy Jones fans. A community in Las Vegas.

Architecture of the sun as a solution to post-pandemic urban design

At the origins of modernism there was also the intention to promote a healthy lifestyle and bring man closer to nature, even through naturism. A lesson forgotten and to be

The 1964 Olympics Certified a New Japan, in Steel and on the Screen

The world’s elite athletes would have been in Tokyo right now if not for the coronavirus pandemic. When they went half a century ago, they discovered a capital transformed by

Design Schools, Now Is the Time to Answer: Who Are We For?

Design and architecture schools have been far slower to make commitments than they were to offer sweeping public statements. In this void, students are reclaiming the political, visionary legacy of

Social Practice

Milton Curry, Dean of the School of Architecture at USC, speaks with Deem’s founders about the meaning of social practice.

How Bernie Sanders Built a New Visual Language for Democratic Socialism

Sanders’ logo is distinctly Americana.

Three Scholars Discuss Racism and Whiteness in the Built Environment

Architectural Record reaches out to architects and designers to explore racism in the profession and the built environment.