Ten projects that showcase Kengo Kuma’s “unexpected and innovative” approach

Japanese architect Kengo Kuma has designed significant projects around the world including the Japan National Stadium and V&A Dundee.

History, Public Space, and Urban Interventions Along the US-Mexican Border

Mexico, a North American country spanning over 1,964,375 km2, features a vast mosaic of different cultures that extends far beyond its geographical boundaries.

The curse of Mies van der Rohe: Berlin’s six-year, £120m fight to fix his dysfunctional, puddle-strewn gallery

The modernist maestro had carte blanche to build a great museum. The result? A breathtaking icon hopeless for displaying art. British architect David Chipperfield relives his gargantuan repair job.

The secret trick that makes networking suck so much less

In addition to finding his current job, Zapier’s Justin Pot says in general, “connecting with people improves your life, but it’s hard, especially online. If you don’t know how to

Cultured Collections with Michael Boyd

At home in Santa Monica—in Oscar Niemeyer’s 1964 Strick House, The Brazilian architect’s only completed residential project in the United States—collector Michael Boyd has curated a lively and livable selection

The Rebirth of Gio Ponti’s Denver Art Museum Tower

How Machado Silvetti and Fentress Architects rehabbed the Italian architect’s only U.S. building.

Mid-Century Britain

From festivals to schools, cathedrals, and bomb sites: The story of mid-century modernism in Britain

Re-evaluating Critical Regionalism: An Architecture of the Place

In his 1983 now-classic essay Towards a Critical Regionalism, Six Points of an Architecture of Resistance, Kenneth Frampton discussed an alternative approach to architecture, one defined by climate, topography and

Why Architects Struggle With Architectural Criticism

I remember thinking it was a strange object, the first time I saw it.” Bill was looking past me and talking about his impression of a new arts center at

A House of Cards: The Miami Condo Collapse Exposes a Dehumanized Mindset in the Built Environment

On June 24th, 2021, the Champlain Towers South condo building in Surfside, Miami collapsed, killing 98 people.

Shelter Architecture: The Subjective Aspects of Migrant and Refugee Settlement Projects

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, estimates that global forced displacement surpassed 80 million in 2020, which is more than one percent of humanity.

How Yale Professor Robert Reed Built Equity in Art and Architecture Classrooms

A former student reflects on her mentor’s celebration of cognitive diversity and the way the late Yale University of Art professor brought design to a broad group of learners, ahead

Future-Proofing Cities Against Climate Change

Recent extreme weather events and the acceleration of climate change, paired with decarbonization efforts that are not on track, make climate-related disruption unavoidable for urban environments, raising the issue of

Can Underused Malls Help Build Healthy Communities?

A design research competition at DLR Group yields a plan to transform a shopping mall into a center for community health.

Why it’s so hard to design an Olympic logo

In 1913, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympic Games, created one of the most recognizable logos in the world. The symbolism of the five colored interlocking

The Latest Summer Reads for Architecture and Design Lovers

From landmark monographs to thought-provoking inquiries, these new releases explore every aspect of the design world.

Getting Real About Sea Level Rise: Landscape Architecture, Policy, and Finance

Over the next hundred years, average global sea levels are expected to rise faster than they have in the last 8,000 years.

The Epic Style of Kerry James Marshall

The artist, a virtuoso of landscape, portraiture, still-life, history painting, and other genres of the Western canon since the Renaissance, can do anything.

An Interview with Ron Nyren

Necessary Fiction publishes Kenneth Caldwell’s interview with Ron Nyren.