The Principles of Community CoDesign

We live in divided times. Extreme forces of pandemic and political polarization are challenging not only essential interactions between individuals and institutions, but the very relationship with the ecosystems through

Richard Saul Wurman: “There’s a Louis Kahn Cult, and I’m a Member!”

Dan Klyn, who teaches information architecture at the University of Michigan, is currently researching and writing a biography entitled Richard Saul Wurman’s 5 Lives.

Stuck in Beta: Amanda Kolson Hurley’s Radical Suburbs

Pal John Parman reviews Amanda Kolson Hurley’s new book.

Hollywood’s Golden Age, As Photographed By Charles Eames

The iconic midcentury polymath documented the making of Billy Wilder’s most famous films.

An Elusive Artist’s Trove of Never-Before-Seen Images

In the years leading up to his death, Ray Johnson took up photography. Now, this body of work is shedding light on his final days.

The Fantastic Architecture of Niki de Saint Phalle

In her first major museum exhibition in New York City, MoMA PS1’s Niki de Saint Phalle: Structures for Life investigates the artist’s underexplored relationship to the built environment.

The Pritzker Prize Honors French Architects Lacaton & Vassal

The modernist hopes and dreams to improve the lives of many are reinvigorated through their work that responds to the climatic and ecological emergencies of our time, as well as

Architecture has a racist past. These artists radically reimagined it

It’s no revelation that Black Americans have been underserved by architects and urban planners. Systemic racism pervades the built environment–from segregated communities and freeways built on top of Black neighborhoods

Why Bruce Mau still believes design can change the world

A new documentary looks at the career and vision of designer Bruce Mau.

Health and Wellness Become Top of Mind for New-Home Builders and Buyers

Our pal, Katie Ackerley, of DBA, is quoted here.

In a Changing World, Design Studios Find Stability and Social Equity in the Co-op Model

The co-op model offers collectively pooled financial backing, creative autonomy, and social responsibility in a changing world.

Albers and Morandi: Never Finished

The work that’s never truly done for the scholar of art is to relate an intimate experience of the artist’s task without merely boiling it down to a referential precipitate.

Review of ‘Building a new New World: Amerikanizm in Russian Architecture’ and ‘Avant-Garde as Method: Vkhutemas and the Pedagogy of Space, 1920–1930’

Thinking about the historical architectural and technical exchanges between the United States and Russia might not seem like an important topic at the moment, suggesting as it does espionage, nuclear

Louis Kahn’s Society of Rooms

In this video, Architecture with Stewart breaks down the floor plan strategies of Louis Kahn (1901-1974) for how they treat and arrange rooms in servant/served configurations.

Architecture ≠ Truth: On the Idea of Buildings as Propaganda

As predicted, President Biden overturned former President Trump’s 10-week-old Executive Order “Promoting Beautiful Federal Civic Architecture.”

How Joe Biden and Kamala Harris Can Help Architects

Following their wise cancellation of the Trump executive order on architectural style for federal buildings, the Biden administration promised to promote a better guide for architects working in the public

Obituary: Hugh Newell Jacobsen, 1929–2021

Hugh Newell Jacobsen grew up wanting to be a painter, which may explain the almost surreal flatness of much of his architecture. On the outside, his buildings lacked overhangs; on

Philip Johnson’s name covered at MoMA for Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) has yet to take fully-realized steps to strip the name of the late architect and institutional figurehead Philip Johnson from all titles and public

10 Questions With… Christine McGrath Breuer

Her Midwest roots run deep. Christine McGrath Breuer, principal at Valerio Dewalt Train, is Chicago-born and a practicing architect in the Windy City office of the generalist firm. Like the

Can Manuals and Toolkits Help Us Design a Safer Present or Future?

Our pals at Studio O+A developed a unique Covid Handbook.

The philanthropic genius of Josef and Anni Albers

Fifty years ago the Bauhaus artists established a foundation to use “minimal means to maximum effect”. A cultural centre, school and, now, hospital in Senegal are a perfect expression of

Ron Nyren on “The Book of Lost Light”

Here is an interview with my frequent collaborator and good friend Ron Nyren. We are talking about his first novel which was recently published. I met Ron Nyren in the

Active Exclusion

Too often the concept “active transportation” produces environments that are not fully accessible. The history of Roosevelt Island, named for a disabled president who used a wheelchair, offers lessons at

How can architecture help rather than harm blackness?

In a new exhibition, the damaging impact architecture has often had on communities of colour is explored along with ideas of how to move forward

“Architecture Can Heal”: MASS Design Group’s Katie Swenson on Building Equity Together

More inclusive, equitable futures are grounded in how we design for justice and the human condition. Katie Swenson is a Senior Principal of international non-profit MASS Design Group, and she

What Milton Glaser reveals about the limits of rational design

Designers have become too reliant on focus groups and previous successes, rather than drawing inspiration from the world around them.