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Call for Applications: Douglas A. Garofalo Fellowship 2019–20

The University of Illinois at Chicago School of Architecture is now accepting applications for the 2019–20 Douglas A. Garofalo Fellowship. Named in honor of the architect and educator Doug Garofalo (1958–2011), this nine-month fellowship provides emerging designers the opportunity to teach studio and seminar courses and conduct independent research, culminating in a public lecture at the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts and an exhibition at the school.

Now in its sixth year, the Garofalo Fellowship has made an essential contribution to the school’s culture through participants’ design and pedagogical agendas. Past fellows include Molly Hunker (SPORTS), Pier

Call for Entries: Disruptive Design - New Solutions to Affordable Housing

Disruptive Design is a three-part design competition that seeks to address the challenges associated with designing and building affordable, owner-occupied housing.

Architects, designers, students, and those invested in urban development are invited to submit their speculative ideas for an owner-occupied housing development incorporating a flexible architectural solution that encourages wealth-building through homeownership and entrepreneurship. The competition will conclude with an occupant/buyer-ready prototype of the winning design.

THE CHALLENGE

The desire for affordable housing is present in both the gentrifying and underserved Chicago neighborhoods. In gentrifying areas, land values rise with desirability; in underserved areas, depreciated property and land values produce an appraisal

Sukhman Yagoda Law Offices / Vladimir Radutny Architects

Sukhman Yagoda Law Offices / Vladimir Radutny Architects - Offices Interiors, Kitchen, Beam, Facade, Door, Table, Lighting, ChairSukhman Yagoda Law Offices / Vladimir Radutny Architects - Offices Interiors, Bathroom, Beam, Facade, Column, Lighting, BathtubSukhman Yagoda Law Offices / Vladimir Radutny Architects - Offices Interiors, Facade, BeamSukhman Yagoda Law Offices / Vladimir Radutny Architects - Offices Interiors, Facade, Beam, Column, ChairSukhman Yagoda Law Offices / Vladimir Radutny Architects - More Images+ 15

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  4000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Fisher & Paykel, Flos, Herman Miller, Krownlab, interior define

The Top Creative Cities and Countries of 2018 According to Airbnb

As 2018 draws to a close, accommodation website Airbnb has dived into their data to reveal the most creative cities and countries from the year. Based on the percentage of hosts who are in the creative industries, the list builds on a previous survey by Airbnb which found that one in 10 Airbnb hosts and one in three Experience hosts identify as members of the creative community.

Read on below for the list of top creative countries and cities according to the new Airbnb study. For architects already planning a New Year’s getaway, check out an article we published of ten projects previously featured by ArchDaily, now available for booking through Airbnb.

Chicago Approves bKL Architecture’s Three-Tower Master Plan for Lakeshore East

Chicago Approves bKL Architecture’s Three-Tower Master Plan for Lakeshore East - Image 3 of 4
Courtesy of bKL architecture

Where the Chicago River meets Lake Michigan, a pivotal node in Chicago’s cityscape, bKL Architecture has designed three towers along the waterfront, which connect the natural elements of the landscape with the urban center and neighboring communities.

The urban development is located at a prominent junction utilized by both pedestrians and automobiles; the site’s new master plan separates the two, providing seamless integration between the active green space surrounding bLK’s three towers and the lakefront.

Wrightwood 659 Exhibition Space / Tadao Ando Architect and Associates

Wrightwood 659 Exhibition Space  / Tadao Ando Architect and Associates - Refurbishment, Stairs, Handrail, Door, Beam
© Jeff Goldberg / Esto

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Illinois Launches Autonomous Vehicle Initiative to Research Self-Driving Cars

The state of Illinois has launched a new testing program for connected and automated vehicles. Called Autonomous Illinois, the research initiative was announced by Governor Bruce Rauner's office. As Curbed Chicago reports, Created by executive order, multiagency program will be state-wide and led by the Illinois Department of Transportation to advance the state’s research in self-driving cars.

SOM Designs Kinematic Sculpture for Chicago Design Week

Architecture firm SOM has designed Kinematic Sculpture, an origami-like pavilion installation for Chicago Design Week. Exploring kinematics as the science of motion, the sculpture was formed as one of the firm's ongoing interdisciplinary research projects. As a test in integrated design, the structure aims to establish ideas that foster new architectural and structural solutions for pressing challenges in the built environment.

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"I Prefer When Form Follows Force": an Interview with Helmut Jahn

In the last few years something has happened to architects’ willingness to strive for originality. The boldest visions now often come from the old guard of architecture - and frankly, I enjoy conversations with them much more. The current insistence on having common ground pushed so many younger architects into a zombie-like copycat state of mind. But to me, common ground means not to think alike – then there is space for discourse.

My most recent conversation with Helmut Jahn at his Chicago office is a case in point. “Architecture is all about going with your gut. I prefer when form follows force rather than function,” he told me. His distinguished career has been one of twists and turns, and he is not planning to give up exploring new ideas any time soon. His 1985 quadrant-in-plan Thompson Center reinvented a mundane government typology into a soaring public place, with its curved colored glass facade decisively welcoming a postmodernist period to Chicago (one we thought had finished, but now seems to be ongoing, encompassing all of post-Modern movements as its mere shades and variations.) Jahn’s architecture shook and modernized a number of global cities, and with time and experience, what began as a rebellion against Mies’s “less is more” modus operandi matured into nuanced, measured, though unquestionably gutsy, production of towers, airports, convention centers, headquarters, and, most importantly, public spaces. As Jahn himself says, “...anything you don’t need is a benefit. Not only you have to have less things but with the things you have left you have to do more.”

"I Prefer When Form Follows Force": an Interview with Helmut Jahn  - Arch Daily Interviews"I Prefer When Form Follows Force": an Interview with Helmut Jahn  - Arch Daily Interviews"I Prefer When Form Follows Force": an Interview with Helmut Jahn  - Arch Daily Interviews"I Prefer When Form Follows Force": an Interview with Helmut Jahn  - Arch Daily InterviewsI Prefer When Form Follows Force: an Interview with Helmut Jahn  - More Images+ 22

AD Classics: World's Columbian Exposition / Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted

The United States had made an admirable showing for itself at the very first World’s Fair, the Crystal Palace Exhibition, held in the United Kingdom in 1851. British newspapers were unreserved in their praise, declaring America’s displayed inventions to be more ingenious and useful than any others at the Fair; the Liverpool Times asserted “no longer to be ridiculed, much less despised.” Unlike various European governments, which spent lavishly on their national displays in the exhibitions that followed, the US Congress was hesitant to contribute funds, forcing exhibitors to rely on individuals for support. Interest in international exhibitions fell during the nation’s bloody Civil War; things recovered quickly enough in the wake of the conflict, however, that the country could host the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in 1876. Celebrating both American patriotism and technological progress, the Centennial Exhibition was a resounding success which set the stage for another great American fair: the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893.[1]

AD Classics: World's Columbian Exposition / Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted - Temporary Installations, ArchAD Classics: World's Columbian Exposition / Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted - Temporary Installations, FacadeAD Classics: World's Columbian Exposition / Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted - Temporary InstallationsAD Classics: World's Columbian Exposition / Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted - Temporary InstallationsAD Classics: World's Columbian Exposition / Daniel Burnham and Frederick Law Olmsted - More Images+ 11

AD Classics: Prentice Women's Hospital / Bertrand Goldberg

This article was originally published on September 28, 2013. To read the stories behind other celebrated architecture projects, visit our AD Classics section.

Hospital buildings, with their high standards of hygiene and efficiency, are a restrictive brief for architects, who all too often end up designing uninspiring corridors of patient rooms constructed from a limited palette of materials. However, this was not the case in Bertrand Goldberg's 1975 Prentice Women's Hospital. The hospital is the best example of a series of Goldberg-designed medical facilities, which all adhere to a similar form: a tower containing rooms for patient care, placed atop a rectilinear plinth containing the hospital's other functions.

AD Classics: Prentice Women's Hospital / Bertrand Goldberg - Hospital , Facade, Arch, CityscapeAD Classics: Prentice Women's Hospital / Bertrand Goldberg - Hospital , Beam, Arch, FacadeAD Classics: Prentice Women's Hospital / Bertrand Goldberg - Hospital , Facade, CityscapeAD Classics: Prentice Women's Hospital / Bertrand Goldberg - Hospital , FacadeAD Classics: Prentice Women's Hospital / Bertrand Goldberg - More Images+ 2

Read on for more about this masterwork of humanist brutalism...

"I Want to Build Lighter": Francisco Gonzalez Pulido of FGP Atelier

After graduating from Tecnológico de Monterrey, a leading technical school in Mexico, Francisco Gonzalez Pulido worked on design-build projects for six years before leaving for the US where he earned his Master’s degree from Harvard’s GSD in 1999. The same year the architect started working with Helmut Jahn in Chicago where he stayed for 18 years – from intern to becoming the president of the company in 2012, at which point he renamed the firm into Jahn. By then he developed his own body of work there. Last year Gonzalez Pulido started FGP Atelier in his adopted home city.

Today the studio, counts a dozen of architects and is overseeing the design of a couple of high-rises in China, a baseball stadium in Mexico City, and university buildings in Monterrey, among other projects. The following interview was conducted at FGP Atelier in Chicago, during which the architect was explicit about transmitting his view: “Architecture is too rigid, too formal. It is time to break free…I want to build lighter. I want to build smarter.”

"I Want to Build Lighter": Francisco Gonzalez Pulido of FGP Atelier - Arch Daily Interviews"I Want to Build Lighter": Francisco Gonzalez Pulido of FGP Atelier - Arch Daily Interviews"I Want to Build Lighter": Francisco Gonzalez Pulido of FGP Atelier - Arch Daily Interviews"I Want to Build Lighter": Francisco Gonzalez Pulido of FGP Atelier - Arch Daily InterviewsI Want to Build Lighter: Francisco Gonzalez Pulido of FGP Atelier - More Images+ 36

McDonald's Chicago Flagship / Ross Barney Architects

McDonald's Chicago Flagship / Ross Barney Architects - Refurbishment, Facade, BeamMcDonald's Chicago Flagship / Ross Barney Architects - Refurbishment, Facade, BeamMcDonald's Chicago Flagship / Ross Barney Architects - Refurbishment, Facade, CityscapeMcDonald's Chicago Flagship / Ross Barney Architects - Refurbishment, FacadeMcDonald's Chicago Flagship / Ross Barney Architects - More Images+ 20

McDonald’s Global HQ / Gensler + IA Interior Architects and O+A Studio

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Spotlight: Louis Sullivan

Spotlight: Louis Sullivan - Image 6 of 4
© Flickr user chicagoarchitecturetoday licensed under CC BY 2.0. Image © Flickr user chicagoarchitecturetoday licensed under CC BY 2.0

Known as Chicago's "Father of Skyscrapers," Louis Sullivan (September 3, 1856 – April 14, 1924) foreshadowed modernism with his famous phrase "form follows function." Sullivan was an architectural prodigy even as a young man, graduating high school and beginning his studies at MIT when he was just 16. After just a year of study he dropped out of MIT, and by the time he was just 24 he had joined forces with Dankmar Adler as a full partner of Adler and Sullivan.

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The Chicago Architecture Center Opens in New Location

After their previous announcement back in January, the Chicago Architecture Center (CAC) is officially open to the public this Friday, August 31st. Formerly known as the Chicago Architecture Foundation, the 20,000 square foot CAC opens in a new location at 111 East Wacker Drive. Featuring programs, exhibitions and tours, the center aims to be "home to everything architecture in Chicago." The CAC includes a range of custom designed spaces, from an architecture store and lecture hall to interactive exhibits.

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156 West Superior Condominiums / The Miller Hull Partnership

156 West Superior Condominiums / The Miller Hull Partnership - Apartments, Facade, Balcony, Handrail, Chair, Table, Cityscape156 West Superior Condominiums / The Miller Hull Partnership - Apartments, Facade156 West Superior Condominiums / The Miller Hull Partnership - Apartments, Door, Facade, Column, Cityscape156 West Superior Condominiums / The Miller Hull Partnership - Apartments, Facade, Handrail, Door156 West Superior Condominiums / The Miller Hull Partnership - More Images+ 6

Good Taste and the Transformation of McDonald's

Good Taste and the Transformation of McDonald's - Featured Image
Courtesy of McDonald's, via Metropolis Magazine

This article was originally published on Metropolis Magazine as "Will the Culture of Good Taste Devour McDonald's?"

At a new corporate headquarters in Chicago’s West Loop neighborhood, there’s a double-height lobby filled with green walls and massive art installations. Travel to its top floor roof deck and you’ll find a cozy fire pit next to a fitness center and bar (happy hours are on Thursday). Elsewhere, stair-seating terraces face floor-to-ceiling windows with views of the Chicago skyline. This vertical campus settles in peaceably among its tony Randolph Street neighbors—Michelin stars, tech giants, and boutique hotels. At first glance, it’s refined and tasteful enough to be any one of these.