1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture News

Architecture News

Winning Proposal for Finland Bay Masterplan Transforms Industry into Innovation

The City of Tampere, Finland has announced the proposal by Schauman & Nordgren Architects and Mandaworks as the winner of an open international competition for Hiedanranta Bay's new master plan. The design, entitled "Hiedanranta Innovation Bay," responds to the rapid growth of Tampere's central region. Over the next 20 years, the Innovation Bay will see the transformation of the former industrial district into an innovation hub for sustainable economic development, creating 10,000 new jobs, and housing over 25,000 new residents.

Winning Proposal for Finland Bay Masterplan Transforms Industry into Innovation - Image 1 of 4Winning Proposal for Finland Bay Masterplan Transforms Industry into Innovation - Image 2 of 4Winning Proposal for Finland Bay Masterplan Transforms Industry into Innovation - Image 3 of 4Winning Proposal for Finland Bay Masterplan Transforms Industry into Innovation - Image 4 of 4Winning Proposal for Finland Bay Masterplan Transforms Industry into Innovation - More Images+ 10

The Results Are In: 2016 Is a Record-Breaking Year for Tall Buildings

In its annual report, the 2016 Tall Building Year in Review, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) has announced that 2016 saw the completion of a record 128 buildings 200 meters or higher. This number surpasses the previous record of 114 completions set in 2015. Eighteen of these buildings became the tallest in their city, country, or region, and ten earned the designation of supertall, at 300 meters and above.

The Results Are In: 2016 Is a Record-Breaking Year for Tall Buildings - Featured ImageThe Results Are In: 2016 Is a Record-Breaking Year for Tall Buildings - Image 1 of 4The Results Are In: 2016 Is a Record-Breaking Year for Tall Buildings - Image 2 of 4The Results Are In: 2016 Is a Record-Breaking Year for Tall Buildings - Image 3 of 4The Results Are In: 2016 Is a Record-Breaking Year for Tall Buildings - More Images+ 8

This Copenhagen Diabetes Center Connects Patients to Nature

The team of COWI A/S, Vilhelm Lauritzen Architects, Mikkelsen Architects, and STED Landscape has been selected to design Copenhagen’s new diabetes center, Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen. Based on the idea of creating a connection to nature, the Center weaves together the indoors and outdoors, in order to stimulate and nurture patients and visitors.

The main entrance to the project faces south to ensure natural lighting, and features a rolling landscape that leads inside, with an in situ poured concrete pathway and landscaped staircases that connect to a public rooftop garden.

On arrival, visitors are greeted by a luscious, rolling landscape leading inside. The area is designed with curiosity in mind – from the outset patients and visitors must feel welcome and enticed to explore.

 This Copenhagen Diabetes Center Connects Patients to Nature - Table, Lighting, Chair This Copenhagen Diabetes Center Connects Patients to Nature - Garden, Fence, Cityscape This Copenhagen Diabetes Center Connects Patients to Nature - Facade, Bench, Chair This Copenhagen Diabetes Center Connects Patients to Nature - Facade, Beam, Chair This Copenhagen Diabetes Center Connects Patients to Nature - More Images+ 9

Herzog & de Meuron's Chelsea FC Stadium Receives Council Approval

Herzog & de Meuron’s Chelsea Football Club stadium has been given approval by Hammersmith and Fulham council’s planning committee, reports BBC. The new £500 million stadium, which is estimated to be completed by 2020, will replace the existing stadium at Stamford Bridge, increasing the capacity of the space by almost 20,000 spectators to 60,000 seats.

The design of the new stadium is inspired by Gothic architecture, as well as nearby Victorian-era brick terraces, which will wrap around the entirety of the building.

Committee decision to approve the stadium plans does not mean that work can begin on site; various other permissions will be necessary before the final decision will be made by London Mayor Sadiq Khan.

Herzog & de Meuron's Chelsea FC Stadium Receives Council Approval - Image 1 of 4Herzog & de Meuron's Chelsea FC Stadium Receives Council Approval - Image 2 of 4Herzog & de Meuron's Chelsea FC Stadium Receives Council Approval - Image 3 of 4Herzog & de Meuron's Chelsea FC Stadium Receives Council Approval - Image 4 of 4Herzog & de Meuron's Chelsea FC Stadium Receives Council Approval - More Images+ 4

Discover Madrid's Geometric Architecture Through This Photo Series

Digital Designer and Creative Director Joel Filipe has unveiled Geometry of Madrid Architecture, a series of photographs depicting the bold architecture of Madrid. Through the project, Filipe reveals varying “geometries within minimalist clichés that underline the lines of the buildings.”

Buildings photographed in the series include Ciudad BBVA, by Herzog & de Meuron, Museo ABC, by Aranguren & Gallegos Architects, Hospital Rey Juan Carlos, by Rafael de La-Hoz, and more.

“This project aims at challenging the viewer by exploring the intimate relationship between architecture and photography,” said Filipe.

Experience the geometry of Madrid, after the break.

Discover Madrid's Geometric Architecture Through This Photo Series - Image 1 of 4Discover Madrid's Geometric Architecture Through This Photo Series - Image 2 of 4Discover Madrid's Geometric Architecture Through This Photo Series - Image 3 of 4Discover Madrid's Geometric Architecture Through This Photo Series - Image 4 of 4Discover Madrid's Geometric Architecture Through This Photo Series - More Images+ 17

This German House Sheds Excess to Provide Peace and Clarity

Designed by Düsseldorf-based interior architecture practice Falkenberg Innenarchitektur, House Rheder II is designed as a serene retreat, shedding inessential features and integrating itself within the natural landscape. Framing views of the idyllic greenery of East Westfalia and gentle waters of the river Nethe, the project aims to dissolve the chaos of modern life.

"In a time of excess we have built a house that makes the essentials tangible," said the client. "It should not be big and important, but small and correct."

This German House Sheds Excess to Provide Peace and Clarity - Image 1 of 4This German House Sheds Excess to Provide Peace and Clarity - Image 2 of 4This German House Sheds Excess to Provide Peace and Clarity - Image 3 of 4This German House Sheds Excess to Provide Peace and Clarity - Image 4 of 4This German House Sheds Excess to Provide Peace and Clarity - More Images+ 5

Newly Discovered Molecular ‘Glue’ May hold the Key to Strong Wooden Skyscrapers

The key to engineering wood strong enough to support skyscrapers may lie in the interaction between molecules 10,000 times narrower than the width of a human hair.

A new study by researchers at the Universities of Warwick and Cambridge has solved a long-held mystery of how key polymers in plant cells bind to form strong, indigestible materials such as wood and straw. By recreating this ‘glue’ in a lab, engineers may be able to produce new wood-based materials that surpass current strength capabilities.

Herzog & de Meuron Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Finally Celebrates Grand Opening

Herzog & de Meuron’s Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, Germany has opened after 16 years of planning and construction, which was held back by financial and legal issues. The grand opening of the concert hall, taking place on January 11 and 12, 2017, features inaugural concerts and a light display on the façade of the building.

As Hamburg’s newest cultural destination, the building was inaugurated by German Federal President Joachim Gauck, Mayor of Hamburg Olaf Scholz, architect Jacques Herzog from Herzog & de Meuron, and General and Artistic Director Christoph Lieben-Seutter.

More than 4,500 guests from Germany and abroad will take part in the opening concerts in the Grand Hall and Recital Hall today and tomorrow, including Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel, various high-ranking political and cultural leaders from around the world, and 1,000 visitors who won tickets to the event, out of 220,000 entrants from 73 countries.

Herzog & de Meuron Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Finally Celebrates Grand Opening  - Image 1 of 4Herzog & de Meuron Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Finally Celebrates Grand Opening  - Image 2 of 4Herzog & de Meuron Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Finally Celebrates Grand Opening  - Image 3 of 4Herzog & de Meuron Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Finally Celebrates Grand Opening  - Image 4 of 4Herzog & de Meuron Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Finally Celebrates Grand Opening  - More Images+ 4

Foster + Partners Begins Construction on Poland's Tallest Tower

Construction has begun on Foster + Partners’ Varso Tower, which will become Poland’s tallest tower upon completion. As a part of the larger Varso complex, which will include three additional buildings, the 53-story tower will reach 310 meters in height and will span 140,000 square meters.

The tower is expected to become a new hotspot for business, residents, and tourists, as it will house flexible office space, two restaurants, shops, cafés, covered internal streets, and an observation deck, which at 230 meters will become one of the highest in Europe. From here, building users, locals, and tourists will experience views of Warsaw’s skyline and the metropolitan area.

Watch the Tides Change from this Thames River Museum Proposal

Architect Evgeny Didorenko has released his conceptual proposal, Thames River Museum, which aims to improve connectivity on the North Bank of the Thames River and create an exciting museum space in London.

The Thames Museum is currently a museum concept without permanent accommodation. Though not officially connected to the Thames Museum, Didorenko’s work suggests a location and design for the project that would not only work with the museum’s context, but that would also solve existing issues on the riverbank.

Therefore, the proposal’s site is an underused portion of London’s North Bank—Queen’s Quay. Historically, Queen’s Quay served as a transportation hub to deliver goods to city residents from the sea, but now lies abandoned, and stays dry during periods of low tide, when water levels drop up to eight meters.

Watch the Tides Change from this Thames River Museum Proposal  - Image 1 of 4Watch the Tides Change from this Thames River Museum Proposal  - Image 2 of 4Watch the Tides Change from this Thames River Museum Proposal  - Image 3 of 4Watch the Tides Change from this Thames River Museum Proposal  - Image 4 of 4Watch the Tides Change from this Thames River Museum Proposal  - More Images+ 5

Los Angeles Selected as New Site for MAD's Lucas Museum

The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art has finally found a home. Following nearly a decade of searching, the museum’s board has announced that Los Angeles’ Exposition Park will serve as the site for the MAD Architects-designed building housing the life’s work and expansive art and media collection of one of history’s most celebrated filmmakers, George Lucas.

Aedas Releases Plans for Blooming Bamboo-Inspired Tower in China

Aedas has released its design for Gmond International Building, a representative regeneration project located in the old town area of Shenzhen, China. The 200-meter super high-rise building is inspired by the traditional form of Chinese totem bamboo, which symbolizes prosperity and moral integrity.

With nearly 60,000 square meters of gross floor area, the building will house the headquarters for Tellus-Gmond, Grade 5A lettable office spaces, and a jewelry-trading center.

Aedas Releases Plans for Blooming Bamboo-Inspired Tower in China - Image 1 of 4Aedas Releases Plans for Blooming Bamboo-Inspired Tower in China - Image 2 of 4Aedas Releases Plans for Blooming Bamboo-Inspired Tower in China - Image 3 of 4Aedas Releases Plans for Blooming Bamboo-Inspired Tower in China - Image 4 of 4Aedas Releases Plans for Blooming Bamboo-Inspired Tower in China - More Images+ 1

Mecanoo Unveils Design for Experimental Garden and Palace Restoration in The Netherlands

Mecanoo has unveiled its design to transform The Soestdijk Estate into Eden Soestdijk, “an experimental garden for a sustainable society and a paradise destination for all” in The Netherlands. In an effort to become an educational tool for environmental awareness, the project aims to make a significant contribution to meeting the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

“The world is facing pressure from increasingly larger and more complex problems when it comes to water, food, climate and energy,” said Anton Valk, chairman of the Eden Soestdijk foundation. “Eden Soestdijk wants to tackle these problems and contribute to a more sustainable society by stimulating and inspiring visitors to change their behaviour in a positive way.”

An architectural greenhouse behind the palace gardens will be the centerpiece of the project, and will house an interactive exhibition focusing on topics like circularity, ecological balance, and social aspects of sustainability.

Mecanoo Unveils Design for Experimental Garden and Palace Restoration in The Netherlands - Image 1 of 4Mecanoo Unveils Design for Experimental Garden and Palace Restoration in The Netherlands - Image 2 of 4Mecanoo Unveils Design for Experimental Garden and Palace Restoration in The Netherlands - Image 3 of 4Mecanoo Unveils Design for Experimental Garden and Palace Restoration in The Netherlands - Image 4 of 4Mecanoo Unveils Design for Experimental Garden and Palace Restoration in The Netherlands - More Images+ 4

Daniel Valle Architects Unveils Winning Kindergarten Design for Seoul

Daniel Valle Architects has been awarded first prize in the public competition to design a kindergarten and senior welfare center in Seoul, South Korea, with its project, Maebong Daycare Center.

Located in the neighborhood of Oksu-dong, the 700-square-meter Center is designed around the idea of shifting the scale of the building, so that children feel more comfortable. For example, the massing of the space is broken down into five units that utilize various colors, geometries, and materials to emphasize smaller units within the whole.

“Interior spaces are designed considering both the adult and the children size.  Classrooms and other spaces are provided with smart storage solutions to maximize the usage of space and flexibility. A 'thick wall' will contain most of the items needed in the classroom as well as provide exercise and fun features.”

Daniel Valle Architects Unveils Winning Kindergarten Design for Seoul - Image 1 of 4Daniel Valle Architects Unveils Winning Kindergarten Design for Seoul - Image 2 of 4Daniel Valle Architects Unveils Winning Kindergarten Design for Seoul - Image 3 of 4Daniel Valle Architects Unveils Winning Kindergarten Design for Seoul - Image 4 of 4Daniel Valle Architects Unveils Winning Kindergarten Design for Seoul - More Images+ 11

Designing for Clients

Designing for Clients - Image 1 of 4
Courtesy of Leewardists

As every good design professional knows, the client is at the forefront of every project. Sometimes this can feel like the client plays judge, jury, and executioner to every last revision, and in a field as detailed and complex as architecture, satisfying these demands, as well as the designer’s own creative vision, can be bewildering and aggravating. But in the end, doesn’t adapting to another person’s tastes just push us to be better?

Designing for Clients - Image 2 of 4
Courtesy of Leewardists

Hexagons for a Reason: The Innovative Engineering Behind BIG's Honeycomb

BIG are known for unconventional buildings that often raise the question “how were they able to do that?” Such is the case for BIG’s Honeycomb, a luxury eight-story condominium currently under construction in the Bahamas. The project’s hallmark is its hexagonal façade made up of private balconies, each with its own glass-fronted outdoor pool. The façade was also the project’s greatest engineering challenge, with each balcony (including pool water) weighing between 108,000 and 269,000 pounds (48,000-122,000 kilograms) while cantilevering up to 17.5 feet (5.3 meters) from the structure. Tasked with this challenging brief were DeSimone Consulting Engineers, who previously worked with BIG on The Grove. Read on for more detail on the Honeycomb’s innovative engineering.

Hexagons for a Reason: The Innovative Engineering Behind BIG's Honeycomb - Image 1 of 4Hexagons for a Reason: The Innovative Engineering Behind BIG's Honeycomb - Image 2 of 4Hexagons for a Reason: The Innovative Engineering Behind BIG's Honeycomb - Image 3 of 4Hexagons for a Reason: The Innovative Engineering Behind BIG's Honeycomb - Image 4 of 4Hexagons for a Reason: The Innovative Engineering Behind BIG's Honeycomb - More Images+ 10

Video: This Kinetic Green Wall Displays 'Pixel' Plant Art

Subscriber Access | 

BAD. Built by Associative Data’s Associative Data Research has collaborated with Green Studios to create Kinetic Green Canvas, a prototype Green-Art Installation for building façades.

The Canvas consists of individual modules, each of which is a cube made from steel framework, back paneling, L-shaped jambs, secondary structure, waterproofing board, irrigation piping, Green Studios hydroponic skin, and plants. These layered components are assembled on four sides of the cube module, with a motor and water pipe attachment that circulates water throughout.

Federico Babina's ARCHITALE Brings Fairytales To Life

Imaginative Italian illustrator and architect Federico Babina has unveiled his latest series, ARCHITALE, “a tribute to the fairytale universe where the architectures are reinvented to accommodate the protagonists of the story.”

Through his illustrations, Babina imagines 17 structures that dance between reality and fantasy, with each architectural detail revealing information about the characters and story of the respective fairytale.

Andalucía Rejects Construction of Alvaro Siza's New Gate of Alhambra Project

The Regional Government of Andalucía (Spain) has decided not to move forward with plans to build "Puerta Nueva," the project for the new gate of Alhambra. Designed by Álvaro Siza and Juan Domingo Santos, the proposal won an international competition held in 2010. According to the newspaper El País, the decision follows the latest Icomos report, which rejects its construction and suggests it would have a "negative impact on the exceptional universal value of this monument World Heritage."

The 1992 Pritzker Prize winner's project sparked a long-running dispute between the Monument Patronage, the Mayor's Office of Granada and cultural institutions of Andalusia for the high concentration of commercial services that would be included in the project. "How is it possible to argue that the project is not integrated and is invasive in the landscape when the jury noted that one of its main virtues was its integration in a place so sensitive and intervened since the twentieth century?" remarked Siza and Santos on the decision of Andalucía, according to El País.

Steven Christensen Architecture Wins AAP Award with Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel

Santa-Monica-based Steven Christensen Architecture has won the 2016 AAP American Architecture Prize for Recreational Architecture, with its design for the Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel in Latvia.

In an exploration of the role of the dome throughout the architectural history of public baths, the project utilizes dome shapes—both upright and inverted “as a rhizomatic formal and organizational embodiment of a contemporary public that is democratic, horizontally empowered, and increasingly networked” explained the architects. 

Steven Christensen Architecture Wins AAP Award with Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel - Image 1 of 4Steven Christensen Architecture Wins AAP Award with Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel - Image 2 of 4Steven Christensen Architecture Wins AAP Award with Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel - Image 3 of 4Steven Christensen Architecture Wins AAP Award with Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel - Image 4 of 4Steven Christensen Architecture Wins AAP Award with Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel - More Images+ 5

Margot Krasojević Architects Unveils Lace-Like 3D Printed Light Made of Recycled Plastic

In somewhat of a departure from its usual parametric, experimental work, Margot Krasojević Architects has created a recycled, 3D printed LED light, in an investigation of the importance of reappropriating plastics. The project—Lace LED—however, aligns with the firm’s exploration of renewable energy and environmental issues within architecture and product design.

Printed with post-consumer plastics like synthetic polymer packaging from takeout food containers and 3D printer off-cuts, Lace LED is a light diffuser with fractal pattern configurations resembling a piece of woven lace.

Margot Krasojević Architects Unveils Lace-Like 3D Printed Light Made of Recycled Plastic - Image 1 of 4Margot Krasojević Architects Unveils Lace-Like 3D Printed Light Made of Recycled Plastic - Image 2 of 4Margot Krasojević Architects Unveils Lace-Like 3D Printed Light Made of Recycled Plastic - Image 3 of 4Margot Krasojević Architects Unveils Lace-Like 3D Printed Light Made of Recycled Plastic - Image 4 of 4Margot Krasojević Architects Unveils Lace-Like 3D Printed Light Made of Recycled Plastic - More Images+ 7

Now You Can Browse the Complete Works of Dutch Modernist Willem Marinus Dudok

Dutch journalist Peter Veenendaal has completed a website that features all 136 built works by modernist Willem Marinus Dudok. Dudok, who was formally trained as an engineer, has been hailed as one of the Netherlands’ most influential architects, boasting a prolific career beginning with military barracks and encompassing numerous municipal buildings throughout Europe. Influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright, Dudok is remembered for his form-driven modernism, leaving his legacy in the work of later architects from the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.

Veenendaal has dedicated a substantial portion of his career to documenting Dudok’s work, including a documentary of his most significant projects entitled “City of Light.” Continue on to Veenendaal’s new website here to explore Dudok’s full portfolio.

Now You Can Browse the Complete Works of Dutch Modernist Willem Marinus Dudok - Image 1 of 4Now You Can Browse the Complete Works of Dutch Modernist Willem Marinus Dudok - Image 2 of 4Now You Can Browse the Complete Works of Dutch Modernist Willem Marinus Dudok - Image 3 of 4Now You Can Browse the Complete Works of Dutch Modernist Willem Marinus Dudok - Featured ImageNow You Can Browse the Complete Works of Dutch Modernist Willem Marinus Dudok - More Images+ 30

12 Top Apps for Architects on the Construction Site

We have previously published the best apps for architects, many of which try to boost creativity and productivity for project design. Now, we’ve put together a series of helpful apps for the development and management of construction projects. From digital measuring tools to instant software-generated reports of work progress, we hope this new construction technology will be most useful to you.

MIT Develops Multi-Material Design System Slated to Become “Photoshop of 3D Printing”

Following last year’s introduction of MultiFab, a multi-material 3D printer, researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory has pioneered a system for designing multi-material objects. The new interface, Foundry, is meant to be accessible to non-programmers, whereas multi-material 3D printing technology has historically been prohibitive both with respect to cost and user-friendliness.

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.

In alliance with Architonic
Check the latest Architecture NewsCheck the latest Architecture NewsCheck the latest Architecture News

Check the latest Architecture News