Magazin
Four architects—Diller Scofio + Renfro, H3 Hardy, SHoP Architects, SOM—envision new futures for Penn Station and Madison Square Garden.
Broad Sustainable Building's Sky City is set to start construction in June—with completion seven months later!
We've assembled some of our favorite products, designs, and booths from last week's International Contemporary Funiture Fair in NYC.
The bright pink "Dreamhouse Experience" opened on May 16 to smiling girls as well as protesters.
A European Museum of the Year Award, a new design gallery, and a new metro station in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
The Dutch architect has been appointed Director of the Berlage Center for Advanced studies in Architecture and Urban Design at the Delft University of Technology.
Workers in Belize partially destroyed a 2,300-year-old pyramid to use the crushed rock for road fill.
A major RIBA exhibition in London presents the architect's five-decade-long career.
Brooklyn's Gia Wolff is the recipient of the first traveling fellowship open to architects outside of Harvard GSD since 1935.
The Museum of Modern Art has selected Diller Scofidio + Renfro to design its expansion, potentially incorporating the former Folk Art Museum.
The Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt, National Design Museum has announced the recipients of its 2013 National Design Awards.
Daniel Libeskind beat out Ann Hamilton and Jaume Plensa for a Holocaust memorial at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus.
Harpa - Reykjavik Concert Hall & Conference Centre in Iceland wins 2013 European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture - Mies van der Rohe Award.
The American-born architect based in London died on April 20 after a short illness.
Architecture and other undergraduate students at the longtime tuition-free school will pay up to $20,000 in yearly tuition.
Not surprisingly the library, museum, and policy institute for the 43rd U.S. President is designed by Robert A.M. Stern.
After a three-year restoration, Norway's 1952 gift to the United Nations reopened in a ceremony last week.
Architect Renzo Piano's preliminary design for a $300 million museum on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles includes a "soap bubble."
The transformation of Tour Bois le Prêtre in Paris, by Frédéric Druot and Lacaton & Vassal, wins in the architecture category.
Architekturbild e.v. has announced the winners of its biennial award, to be exhibited at DAM in Frankfurt.
The Vancouver property of late Canadian architect Arthur Erickson is being eyed for development.
The architect says she deserves "a Pritzker Prize inclusion ceremony" during an event on women in architecture.
A special committe has chosen architects to compete in the design of new home of the Nobel Prize in Stockholm.
Congress heard arguments for starting over with the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial in DC.
The winners of the 23rd MIPIM Awards were announced in Cannes, France, on March 14.
Japanese architect Toyo Ito has been named the latest recipient of architecture's highest honor.
The Bjarke Ingels Group is selected to design the LEGO museum, and the Amager Bakke Waste-to-Energy Plant breaks ground.
The scheme by Stewart Hollenstein, with Colin Stewart Architects, has been chosen for the new library and plaza at Green Square Town Centre.
Seattle's NBBJ is designing Google's 1.1-million-square-foot "Bay View" complex in Mountain View, California.
The recently departed Director of the Netherlands Architecture Institute will serve as Creative Director of the 2013 Shenzhen Biennale.
A few months short of its completion, Russians are calling for the "Mariinsky 2"—the most expensive theater building in the world—to be demolished.
Five finalists have been chosen from 335 works for the 2013 European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture – Mies van der Rohe Award.
Paul Rudolph's Orange County Government Center is saved, but Bertrand Goldberg's Prentice Women's Hospital will face the wrecking ball.
The world’s first re-locatable research facility opened on February 5, one hundred years after Captain Robert Falcon Scott’s tragic Antarctic expeditions.
The Spanish architect is the recipient of an award created in 1963 in honor of German architect Heinrich Tessenow (1876-1950).
The 1912 Cass Gilbert-design library has reopened after a $70 million renovation oversaw by Cannon Design.