6 Stories for Louis I. Kahn’s 120th Birthday

“A great building, in my opinion,” the architect Louis I. Kahn once said, “must begin with the unmeasurable, must go through measurable means when it is being designed and in

What Biden’s “Building Back Better” Could Mean for Architecture

The ears of architects, engineers, landscape architects, and urban planners may have collectively pricked up when Biden and Harris as candidates began touting a campaign slogan last summer of “Building

Designer Health for Designer Tenants

It didn’t take long for the coronavirus pandemic to inspire both cutting-edge architectural design solutions and broad speculation about future developments in the field.

The Daily Heller: Architecture on the Common Edge

Architecture is the focal point, but design comes into play in many ways—as structure, monument and shelter.

Op-ed: The axing of DS+R’s London Centre for Music should be music to our ears

The decision to axe plans for Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s Centre for Music in London may be bad news for Simon Rattle and his (former) London Symphony Orchestra (LSO)—but maybe

Comment: Architects Didn’t Invent Redlining, But We Helped Reinforce It—On Two Continents

Activist and architectural designer Wandile Mthiyane examines the twin legacies of American redlining and Apartheid.

Harriet Pattison on the Creative Process of Louis Kahn and Making History

Last fall, Harriet Pattison, Nathaniel’s mother, released a gorgeous new book, Our Days Are Like Full Years: A Memoir with Letters from Louis Kahn. The 92-year-old Pattison has had a

Studio O+A’s Guide for Healthy Workplaces

This toolkit for the times represents the work of Studio O+A’s best planners and designers to apply what we know now to a work environment that will be radically altered.

Architecture and the Environmental Impact of Artificial Complexity

There is an astonishing degree of complexity, order, and beauty in the natural world. Even so, and especially within the realm of living things, nothing is more complex than it

A Radical Examination of Queerness in Communist Propaganda Posters

“What if the artists behind these posters were just creating the least-subtle depictions of a gay utopia?”

Wayne Thom photographed the power of 1970s architecture. He’s finally getting his due.

The new Monacelli Press book “Wayne Thom: Photographing the Late Modern” is dedicated to this expansive period. The volume covers the first 20 years of the photographer’s practice and draws

Grief and grievance: how artists respond to racial violence in America

In a new exhibition, the work of 37 artists has been brought together to show how art can react to the epidemic of violence towards black Americans.

What We Talk About When We Talk About Architecture

Op-ed: Architecture critics have a duty to interrogate inequality in the built environment

How to Build Back Better, but Better

An infrastructure plan won’t be enough to fix the inequities built into our neighborhoods, homes, and public spaces.

In and Around Guadalajara, Homes Like Sanctuaries

As the Mexican city has grown into a creative epicenter, architects have built on the legacy of Luis Barragán, constructing residences that encourage introspection.

James Arthur Baldwin (1924 – 1987)

American novelist, playwright, essayist, poet, and activist. He was prescient.

Achieving Carbon Neutrality Takes More Than a Great Label and Good Intentions

Brands benefit from an eco-friendly glow. But do their labels and certifications hold up?

Visual Arts Commentary: Preservation, Two Cases of To Be or Not to Be

Today’s increasingly heated argument about architectural preservation revolves around discerning which pieces of the past are worth saving, which buildings are valuable to our present and future.

HUD moves to protect LGBTQ Americans from housing discrimination

The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced this morning that it will enforce protections for LGBTQ Americans under the Fair Housing Act (FHA), a decision that

Three Giant Leaps for Mankind, Three Grave Threats to Architecture

Historians will be writing about, and debating, the most significant epistemic changes that occurred during the final two decades of the 20th century for a long time.

Mason on Mariposa

A few years ago, when David Baker Architects began work on Mason on Mariposa, a mixed-use project in the Portrero Hill neighborhood of San Francisco, it marked a return to

Social Urbanism: From the Medellín Model to a New Global Movement

Social Urbanism: Reframing Spatial Design – Discourses from Latin America, a new book by Maria Bellalta, ASLA, dean of the School of Landscape Architecture at the Boston Architectural College, is

Los Angeles Today: Photos by Tim Street-Porter

The new book is 256 pages of the city’s spectacular architecture, including museums like the Broad, the flourishing Arts District, Hollywood’s Chateau Marmont and historic Beverly Hills.

The Twentieth-Century Historic Thematic Framework

The Twentieth-Century Historic Thematic Framework: A Tool for Assessing Heritage Places promotes broad thinking about the historical processes that have contributed to the twentieth-century built environment worldwide.

Why We Don’t Believe the Big City Obituary

America’s cities offer the greatest hope for the country’s recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. Fortunately, the people who live there agree.