1. ArchDaily
  2. Articles

Articles

How to sync your CAD software with Lumion

 | Sponsored Content

Work seamlessly with CAD and Lumion 3D rendering software for immediate model visualizations

Color in Architecture as a Powerful Communication Tool

 | Sponsored Content

Contrary to popular belief, Roman buildings were not as monochrome as previously thought. Recent discoveries indicate that statues and structures were, in fact, richly adorned with bright colors and exuberant decorations, following the tradition established by their Greek predecessors. This may be surprising, but it shows the presence of color in architecture much earlier than imagined. Color has always played a significant role in shaping the perception and experience of a space, and was prominent in the works of seminal architects such as Le Corbusier and Luis Barragán, for example. Another master of the use of color was Michael Wilford, who, together with his former partner James Stirling gained international recognition with notable public buildings, art centers, museums, and libraries located worldwide. The volumes present in Wilford's architecture are often remembered for their careful use of color, which highlights certain elements and adds other dimensions to the structures.

Circles in Interior Design: 27 Projects that Embrace Roundness

Circles, as a fundamental geometric shape, possess a captivating and harmonious quality that has been seamlessly integrated into architecture and design across various eras and styles. From subtle accents to bold focal points, the use of circles in interior design transcends mere ornamentation, often symbolizing continuity, connection, and a soothing visual rhythm. With their endless and unbroken curves, they offer a sense of unity, movement, and balance that can transform spaces into inviting and aesthetically pleasing environments – an effect especially useful for interior design. In this article, we take a look at 27 projects from our ArchDaily database that illustrate circular forms in interiors across the globe.

Circles in Interior Design: 27 Projects that Embrace Roundness - Image 1 of 4Circles in Interior Design: 27 Projects that Embrace Roundness - Image 2 of 4Circles in Interior Design: 27 Projects that Embrace Roundness - Image 3 of 4Circles in Interior Design: 27 Projects that Embrace Roundness - Featured ImageCircles in Interior Design: 27 Projects that Embrace Roundness - More Images+ 30

Next Generation of Landscape Architecture Leaders Focus on Climate, Equity, and Technology

“Our fellows have shown courage, written books, founded mission-driven non-profits, created new coalitions, and disseminated new tools,” said Cindy Sanders, FASLA, CEO of OLIN, in her introduction of the Landscape Architecture Foundation (LAF) Fellowship for Innovation and Leadership program at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C.

Sanders highlighted the results of a five-year assessment of the LAF fellowship program and its efforts to grow the next generation of diverse landscape architecture leaders. The assessment shows that past fellows are shaping the future of the built environment in key public, non-profit, and private sector roles.

Next Generation of Landscape Architecture Leaders Focus on Climate, Equity, and Technology - Image 1 of 4Next Generation of Landscape Architecture Leaders Focus on Climate, Equity, and Technology - Image 2 of 4Next Generation of Landscape Architecture Leaders Focus on Climate, Equity, and Technology - Image 3 of 4Next Generation of Landscape Architecture Leaders Focus on Climate, Equity, and Technology - Image 4 of 4Next Generation of Landscape Architecture Leaders Focus on Climate, Equity, and Technology - More Images+ 11

The Research and Design Laboratory SPACE10 to Close Permanently After 10 Years Of Work

Ten years ago, SPACE10 was born as a pioneering platform ushering in a novel approach to corporate innovation, consolidating itself for its ability to be open, democratic, driven by a playful purpose, and community-oriented. Composed of a small core team of around 23 people based in Copenhagen, their efforts have focused on combining the power of creativity, science, and technology to find solutions that address the accelerated climate crisis and social injustices.

Brazilian Houses With Useful Slabs

The tradition of modern architecture confirms that building roofs are usable spaces as significant as indoor areas. After all, the garden terrace is one of the five points of new architecture, according to Le Corbusier. Although he popularized the concept, the use of rooftops dates back even earlier, encompassing various roles across time, from lookouts for ancestral astronomical studies to more contemporary cultivation areas, passing through the bureaucratic accommodation of electrical and sanitary installations. By offering open space and direct sky access, building roofs have evolved. In dense urban landscapes, converting this space into a leisure area is a logical choice.

Brazilian Houses With Useful Slabs - Image 1 of 4Brazilian Houses With Useful Slabs - Image 2 of 4Brazilian Houses With Useful Slabs - Image 3 of 4Brazilian Houses With Useful Slabs - Image 4 of 4Brazilian Houses With Useful Slabs - More Images+ 6

Urban Rewilding in Europe: The Fight Is on to Retake Green Space

Ever since the birth of our cities, we’ve made sure to protect the green spaces within them. Civilizations as far back as the Romans built expansive parks in the heart of the city with ‘Rus in Urbe’ – translating as ‘Country in the City’ – still referenced today. In order to control the urbanization boom of the mid-20th century, meanwhile, greenbelt policies across many European cities literally ring-fenced the natural environments surrounding them, making air quality and easier access to nature a part of city life.

The post-pandemic city, however, is a new breed of conurbation, and these city parks and greenbelts are no longer enough. As we migrate away in search of greener, healthier climes, the cities we’re leaving are evolving, proving they can be green too by exchanging lesser-used black surfaces of roads and structures for natural grass- and parkland. These four projects from across Europe transform unused city spaces back into the natural and regenerative green environments they once were.

Next Generation Goggles: Augmented Reality Meets Virtual Reality

This article is the fifth in a series focusing on the Architecture of the Metaverse. ArchDaily has collaborated with John Marx, AIA, the founding design principal and Chief Artistic Officer of Form4 Architecture, to bring you monthly articles that seek to define the Metaverse, convey the potential of this new realm as well as understand its constraints.

Science fiction writers inspire us with bold and provocative visions of the future. Huxley, Orwell, Assimov, and Bradbury easily come to mind.  They have imagined great advances in technology and oftentimes predicted shifts in social structure that were a result of the human need to open Pandora's Box. A large part of the charm and allure of science fiction is the bold audacity of some of these predictions. They seem to defy the laws of nature and science, and then, faster than you might have thought, the spectrum of human inventiveness makes it so.

Next Generation Goggles: Augmented Reality Meets Virtual Reality - Image 1 of 4Next Generation Goggles: Augmented Reality Meets Virtual Reality - Image 2 of 4Next Generation Goggles: Augmented Reality Meets Virtual Reality - Image 3 of 4Next Generation Goggles: Augmented Reality Meets Virtual Reality - Image 4 of 4Next Generation Goggles: Augmented Reality Meets Virtual Reality - More Images+ 7

Opening Up / Ultimate Doors and Joinery: The Art of Making a Grand Entrance

 | Sponsored Content

Grand entrances are the specialty of Bill Alam in episode 8 of Opening up, who is the Director of Sydney-based company Ultimate Doors and Joinery.

A Little History About Kitchenettes

Housing has always been a significant issue in metropolises. It accommodates the city's population and can impact other urban concerns, such as the necessary commute between home and work or school.

Broadly, urban densification enjoys widespread acceptance in urban planning. In today's context, the correlation between densification and housing is addressed by designing high-rise buildings with smaller floor areas. This approach yields apartments with minimal functionalities, known in Brazil as kitchenettes. As with any architectural type, these compact residences have advantages and disadvantages, serving either as a model of efficiency or as an illustration of housing instability.

A Little History About Kitchenettes - Image 1 of 4A Little History About Kitchenettes - Image 2 of 4A Little History About Kitchenettes - Image 3 of 4A Little History About Kitchenettes - Image 4 of 4A Little History About Kitchenettes - More Images+ 2

The Second Studio Podcast: Overcoming the Challenges of Remodels

The Second Studio (formerly The Midnight Charette) is an explicit podcast about design, architecture, and the everyday. Hosted by Architects David Lee and Marina Bourderonnet, it features different creative professionals in unscripted conversations that allow for thoughtful takes and personal discussions.

A variety of subjects are covered with honesty and humor: some episodes are interviews, while others are tips for fellow designers, reviews of buildings and other projects, or casual explorations of everyday life and design. The Second Studio is also available on iTunes, Spotify, and YouTube.

This week David and Marina of FAME Architecture & Design discuss the unique challenges of residential remodels and how they solve them. The two cover project scope and vision, design analysis, three different types of remodel projects and how they should be approached, predicting and planning for construction surprises, having an adaptable mindset, the most common challenge clients face (scope creep), and more.

21 Projects Where Kengo Kuma (Re)Uses Materials in Unusual Ways

Kengo Kuma uses materials to connect with the local context and the users of his projects. The textures and elementary forms of constructive systems, materials, and products, are exhibited and used in favor of the architectural concept, giving value to the functions that will be carried out in each building.

From showcases made with ceramic tiles to the sifted light created by expanded metal panels, passing through an ethereal polyester coating, Kuma understands the material as an essential component that can make a difference in architecture from the design stages. Next, we present 21 projects where Kengo Kuma masterfully uses construction materials.

21 Projects Where Kengo Kuma (Re)Uses Materials in Unusual Ways - Image 1 of 421 Projects Where Kengo Kuma (Re)Uses Materials in Unusual Ways - Image 2 of 421 Projects Where Kengo Kuma (Re)Uses Materials in Unusual Ways - Image 3 of 421 Projects Where Kengo Kuma (Re)Uses Materials in Unusual Ways - Image 4 of 421 Projects Where Kengo Kuma (Re)Uses Materials in Unusual Ways - More Images+ 41

What Primitive Huts Teach Us About Architecture

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

Origin myths,” “founding myths,” and “creation legends” provide a way for us to see into and imagine the distant past in metaphorical, poetic, and compelling ways. The oldest origin myths help us understand how a people or a place (such as the universe) were believed to have come into existence. Anthropologists describe these as creation myths or “cosmogonic” myths. They might explain how the world came to be. For example, Native North American peoples such as the Cherokee, Ojibwe, and Aztecs share an origin myth that land was first created on top of a great ocean. One of the most common Western origin myths is the creation of Adam and Eve. But founding stories exist for all kinds of social conditions, historical customs, and objects, as well as places—think of the myth of the brothers Romulus and Remus, suckled as babies by a wolf, who survive to found the city of Rome (after Romulus got rid of his brother).

What Primitive Huts Teach Us About Architecture - Image 1 of 4What Primitive Huts Teach Us About Architecture - Image 2 of 4What Primitive Huts Teach Us About Architecture - Image 3 of 4What Primitive Huts Teach Us About Architecture - Image 4 of 4What Primitive Huts Teach Us About Architecture - More Images+ 1

Exploring Rounded Shapes: An Examination of Interior Design Trends

After years of dominance, orthogonal lines and right angles are giving way to organic designs and rounded shapes within interior design projects. This profound shift in formal language has led to the infiltration of gentle curves and amorphous volumes into design pieces, furniture, and decorative elements, a transformation that's becoming increasingly evident. Some argue that this change may be indirectly linked to the growing interest in sustainability and the pursuit of strategies that reconnect people with nature, as seen in the consistent presence of biophilia across projects of various scales. The period of social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic further heightened this inclination, prompting individuals to devise ways to incorporate nature into their living spaces, thereby enhancing well-being in day-to-day life.

Exploring Rounded Shapes: An Examination of Interior Design Trends - Image 1 of 4Exploring Rounded Shapes: An Examination of Interior Design Trends - Image 2 of 4Exploring Rounded Shapes: An Examination of Interior Design Trends - Image 3 of 4Exploring Rounded Shapes: An Examination of Interior Design Trends - Image 4 of 4Exploring Rounded Shapes: An Examination of Interior Design Trends - More Images+ 21

From Stone Walls to Skyscrapers: Understanding Structural Masonry

The Monadnock Building in Chicago began construction in 1891 and is still in use today. The building features a somber facade without ornamentation and a colossal height - at the time - of 16 floors. It is considered the first skyscraper built in structural masonry, with ceramic bricks and a granite base. To support the entire load of the building, the structural walls on the ground floor are 1.8 meters thick, and at the top, 46 centimeters. One hundred and thirty years later, this construction system remains common and allows for the erection of taller buildings with much thinner walls, accomplishing even new architectural works economically and rationally. But what is structural masonry about, and how can designers use it in architectural projects? And for what kinds of buildings is this system most suitable?

Capturing the Essence of Delos: A Photographic Journey with Erieta Attali

Nestled amidst the Aegean Sea, the ancient island of Delos emerges as a timeless testament to human ingenuity and the harmonious interplay between architecture and nature, in this captivating series of photographs shared with ArchDaily for the International Day of Photography by artist Erieta Attali, along with the insightful voice of Brazilian architect Angelo Bucci. Inspired by Attali's work, Bucci crafts a narrative that explores the profound connection between architecture and the environment, echoing the ethos of Delos itself.

Rewilding in Architecture: Concepts, Applications, and Examples

In an age where humanity's detrimental impact on the environment has become increasingly evident, the concept of rewilding is emerging as a powerful approach to conservation and ecological restoration. In line with growing attention on landscape architecture in recent years, the idea of removing human intervention from our natural surroundings in order to restore a stable equilibrium seems to offer a low-effort, ethereal way to right fundamental climate wrongs. But is a lack of meddling in nature really all there is to rewilding, and how does this relate to architecture and design? We look at key concepts, applications, and examples to find out.

Rewilding in Architecture: Concepts, Applications, and Examples - Image 1 of 4Rewilding in Architecture: Concepts, Applications, and Examples - Image 2 of 4Rewilding in Architecture: Concepts, Applications, and Examples - Image 3 of 4Rewilding in Architecture: Concepts, Applications, and Examples - Image 4 of 4Rewilding in Architecture: Concepts, Applications, and Examples - More Images+ 3

Defining The Impact of The Metaverse

This article is the first in a series focusing on the Architecture of the Metaverse. ArchDaily has collaborated with John Marx, AIA, the founding design principal and Chief Artistic Officer of Form4 Architecture, to bring you monthly articles that seek to define the Metaverse, convey the potential of this new realm as well as understand its constraints.

The Metaverse is currently hard to define. Try to think of it as the bringing together of the abundance of virtual communities we have created over the years on Facebook with the enormous range of leisure opportunities akin to shopping on Amazon. Yet, the Metaverse goes far beyond this and makes a new type of landscape possible by playing on the very qualities of placemaking we know from the cities, towns, and villages we inhabit worldwide. The Metaverse is a transactional space, and perhaps above all an experiential space where unexpected events take place and, importantly, shared events are enjoyed on an individual and communal basis.

Defining The Impact of The Metaverse - Featured ImageDefining The Impact of The Metaverse - Image 1 of 4Defining The Impact of The Metaverse - Image 2 of 4Defining The Impact of The Metaverse - Image 3 of 4Defining The Impact of The Metaverse - More Images+ 1

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.