The Sociology of Coliving: How WeLive Creates a "Third Place"

This article was originally published on Autodesk's Redshift publication (formerly known as Line//Shape//Space), under the title "Live, Work, Play: WeLive’s Live-Work Spaces Reveal a 'Third Place.'"

According to urban sociologist Ray Oldenburg, people need three types of places to live fulfilled, connected lives: Their “first place” (home) for private respite; their “second place” (work) for economic engagement; and their “third place,” a more amorphous arena used for reaffirming social bonds and community identities.

This third place can be a barbershop, neighborhood bar, community center, or even a public square. The desire for these three separate spheres drives how human environments are designed at a bedrock level, but increasing urbanism—as well as geographic and economic mobility—are collapsing these multiple spaces into one. The result is a new hybrid building type: a live-work multiunit dwelling that is home, office, and clubhouse.

Irving Place Carriage House / LOT-EK

Irving Place Carriage House  / LOT-EK - Extension, Door, Beam, Stairs, ChairIrving Place Carriage House  / LOT-EK - Extension, Stairs, Handrail, Door, Table, ChairIrving Place Carriage House  / LOT-EK - Extension, Facade, CityscapeIrving Place Carriage House  / LOT-EK - Extension, Door, Facade, Beam, HandrailIrving Place Carriage House  / LOT-EK - More Images+ 28

  • Architects: LOT-EK
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  2500 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Gaggenau, Agape, Bosch, matt ganon studio LA, wendell castle
  • Professionals: RSA

Green Urban Park Floating Above a Highway Unifies Buckhead Neighborhood in Atlanta

Rogers Partners Architects+Urban Designers and Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects have released preliminary designs for a new park floating above a divisive highway and commuter rail line in the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia. A 2,400-foot-long elevated traverse, Buckhead Park Over GA400 aims to bring the community together with safe, convenient access to the amenities and cultural attractions in Buckhead.

Green Urban Park Floating Above a Highway Unifies Buckhead Neighborhood in Atlanta - Image 1 of 4Green Urban Park Floating Above a Highway Unifies Buckhead Neighborhood in Atlanta - Image 5 of 4Green Urban Park Floating Above a Highway Unifies Buckhead Neighborhood in Atlanta - Image 2 of 4Green Urban Park Floating Above a Highway Unifies Buckhead Neighborhood in Atlanta - Image 3 of 4Green Urban Park Floating Above a Highway Unifies Buckhead Neighborhood in Atlanta - More Images+ 4

Museum De Pont Expansion and New Entrance Gate / Benthem Crouwel Architects

Museum De Pont Expansion and New Entrance Gate / Benthem Crouwel Architects - Extension, Facade, Handrail, Table, ChairMuseum De Pont Expansion and New Entrance Gate / Benthem Crouwel Architects - Extension, Beam, FacadeMuseum De Pont Expansion and New Entrance Gate / Benthem Crouwel Architects - Extension, Beam, Facade, ArchMuseum De Pont Expansion and New Entrance Gate / Benthem Crouwel Architects - Extension, FacadeMuseum De Pont Expansion and New Entrance Gate / Benthem Crouwel Architects - More Images+ 14

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  TDE-lighttech, Lignatur, TBA

Architecture After the Event Horizon – Volume #49: Hello World!

The following essay by Kazys Varnelis was first published by Volume Magazine in their 49th issue, Hello World! You can read the Editorial of this issue, Going Live, here.

During the last decade, the idea of a technological singularity has passed from science fiction to a plausible prediction of the proximate future. In its simplest terms, a technological singularity will take place when an artificial general intelligence (AGI), capable of modifying its own code, advances so rapidly that subsequent technological progress (and as a result history itself) become as unpredictable and unfathomable as what happens within a black hole. In the most radical vision, the ‘hard takeoff’, within hours or even minutes of artificial intelligence developing the capacity for recursive self-improvement, the intelligence advances so greatly that it fundamentally transforms life on Earth.

Architecture After the Event Horizon – Volume #49: Hello World! - Image 1 of 4

Archeopark Pavlov / Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet

Archeopark Pavlov / Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet - Preservation Site, ColumnArcheopark Pavlov / Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet - Preservation Site, Facade, LightingArcheopark Pavlov / Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet - Preservation Site, StairsArcheopark Pavlov / Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet - Preservation Site, Facade, DoorArcheopark Pavlov / Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet - More Images+ 23

  • Architects: Architektonická kancelář Radko Květ: Architektonicka kancelar Radko Kvet
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1134
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Cemex

Dual House / Pitsou Kedem Architects + Axelrod Architects

Dual House  / Pitsou Kedem Architects + Axelrod Architects - Houses, Stairs, Facade, Handrail, DoorDual House  / Pitsou Kedem Architects + Axelrod Architects - Houses, Courtyard, Facade, ChairDual House  / Pitsou Kedem Architects + Axelrod Architects - Houses, Facade, ChairDual House  / Pitsou Kedem Architects + Axelrod Architects - Houses, Table, BenchDual House  / Pitsou Kedem Architects + Axelrod Architects - More Images+ 15

Kfar Shmaryahu, Israel
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  8000 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  APEX, APEX Windows, Aqualift, Bulthaup, Habitat

Challenger / Woods Bagot

Challenger / Woods Bagot - BankChallenger / Woods Bagot - BankChallenger / Woods Bagot - BankChallenger / Woods Bagot - BankChallenger / Woods Bagot - More Images+ 9

WeWork Yangping Lu / Linehouse

WeWork Yangping Lu / Linehouse - Offices Interiors, Facade, ChairWeWork Yangping Lu / Linehouse - Offices Interiors, Facade, Table, ChairWeWork Yangping Lu / Linehouse - Offices Interiors, Facade, Beam, Lighting, ChairWeWork Yangping Lu / Linehouse - Offices Interiors, Facade, DoorWeWork Yangping Lu / Linehouse - More Images+ 4

  • Architects: Linehouse
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  2200
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016

Open Call: Winter Stations Design Competition 2017

Winter Stations is now embarking on its third-year, opening an international design competition to bring temporary public art installations to The Beaches, exhibited to celebrate Toronto's winter waterfront landscape. This year we are expecting to include up to six lifeguard stands, including an addition three by invited universities, across Balmy, Kew and Ashbridges Bay beaches located in the heart of the Beach community, south of Queen Street East, between Woodbine and Victoria Park Avenues. These utilitarian structures are to be used as the armature for temporary installations, which will need to be able to withstand the rigours of Toronto winter weather.  This is a single-stage open international competition, welcoming artists, designers, architects and landscape architects to submit concept proposals for Winter Stations' temporary artwork installations.

Seddon House / OSK Architects

Seddon House / OSK Architects - Houses, FacadeSeddon House / OSK Architects - Houses, Door, Facade, Handrail, BalconySeddon House / OSK Architects - Houses, Kitchen, Facade, Chair, Table, CountertopSeddon House / OSK Architects - Houses, Facade, Beam, DoorSeddon House / OSK Architects - More Images+ 23

Seddon, Australia

Níall McLaughlin Wins 2016 RIBA Charles Jencks Award for Architecture

The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has announced Níall McLaughlin, founder of Níall McLaughlin Architects, as winner of the 2016 RIBA Charles Jencks Award. The award is given annually to an outstanding architect or practice "that has recently made a major contribution internationally to both the theory and practice of architecture."

“Niall McLaughlin is a great inspiration for architects today, especially the young, because of his masterful skill in drawing from all traditions – classicism, modernism, postmodernism,” said jury member and award namesake Charles Jencks. “All the “isms” are under his belt, not on his back, and he extends them all through the commitment to architecture as an art and professional practice.”

Previous winners of the award include Herzog & de Meuron (2015), Benedetta Tagliabue (2013), Rem Koolhaas (2012), Eric Owen Moss (2011), Steven Holl (2010), Charles Correa (2009), Wolf Prix (2008), Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos (2007), Zaha Hadid (2006), Alejandro Zaera-Polo and Farshid Moussavi (2005), Peter Eisenman (2004) and Cecil Balmond (2003).

Lakeland Elementary School / DLR Group

Lakeland Elementary School / DLR Group - Elementary & Middle School, Facade, DoorLakeland Elementary School / DLR Group - Elementary & Middle School, FacadeLakeland Elementary School / DLR Group - Elementary & Middle School, Chair, TableLakeland Elementary School / DLR Group - Elementary & Middle School, ChairLakeland Elementary School / DLR Group - More Images+ 13

  • Architects: DLR Group
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  44703
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2011
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Forbo Flooring Systems, Benjamin Moore, Collins & Aikman, Crossville, Guilford of Maine, +8

SOM Breaks Ground on One of the Largest Redevelopments in Tokyo’s History

Construction is now underway on Skidmore, Owings & Merrill’s (SOM) OH-1 redevelopment project in the Ohtemachi District of Tokyo, Japan. Covering a 20,000 square meter (215,000 square foot) site, the project constitutes one of the largest revitalization projects in Tokyo’s history. The complex includes two high-rise, mixed-use buildings containing a luxury hotel, commercial office space, retail and cultural facilities, and is centered around a park and public area that will visually connect the development to the adjacent Imperial Palace East Gardens.

3D Printed Replica of Syrian Arch Destroyed by ISIS Erected in New York City

A photo posted by Wappato (@wappato) on

A year after the ancient city of Palmyra, Syria was destroyed by the Islamic State, a 3D-printed recreation of one of its most iconic structures has begun its world tour. Originally erected in London’s Trafalgar square in April, on Monday, the replica of Palmyra’s Arch of Triumph was unveiled in its new location outside city hall in New York City.

Forbury Place / Aukett Swanke

Forbury Place / Aukett Swanke  - Institutional Buildings, FacadeForbury Place / Aukett Swanke  - Institutional Buildings, FacadeForbury Place / Aukett Swanke  - Institutional Buildings, FacadeForbury Place / Aukett Swanke  - Institutional Buildings, Facade, StairsForbury Place / Aukett Swanke  - More Images+ 16

  • Architects: Aukett Swanke
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  185000 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Arkoni, Levolux, Strata Tiles, VetroTech Saint-Gobain
  • Professionals: Sweet

Call for Applications: 2017 Carter Manny Award

The Graham Foundation is now accepting applications for the 2017 Carter Manny Award, the foundation's annual award for Ph.D. students working on dissertation topics in architecture. Applications are due November 15, 2016.

Established in 1996, the Carter Manny Award supports dissertation research and writing by promising scholars whose projects have architecture as their primary focus and the potential to shape architectural discourse. 

Critical Round-Up: The National Museum of African American History and Culture

A century since the founding of the National Memorial Association and the start of a campaign by African-American war veterans for a monument of African American culture, the National Museum of African American History and Culture will finally be opened on September 24th. The Museum took $540 million and four years to build, resulting in a striking, and refreshingly unorthodox, architectural construction on Washington DC’s National Mall. The Freelon Adjaye Bond/SmithGroup JJR team, led by Ghanaian-British architect David Adjaye, defiantly broke the white-marble-Corinthian-column convention, opting instead for a bronze-coated aluminum façade bound to provoke a reaction from the critics.

Critical Round-Up: The National Museum of African American History and Culture - Image 1 of 4Critical Round-Up: The National Museum of African American History and Culture - Image 2 of 4Critical Round-Up: The National Museum of African American History and Culture - Image 3 of 4Critical Round-Up: The National Museum of African American History and Culture - Image 4 of 4Critical Round-Up: The National Museum of African American History and Culture - More Images+ 14

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