1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture News

Architecture News

How to sync your CAD software with Lumion

 | Sponsored Content

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

Inaugural Woods Bagot Prize Awarded to SCI-Arc Grads

Three SCI-Arc graduates became the recipients of the first Woods Bagot Prize, an award that recognizes the top design portfolios and academic achievements from students in the undergraduate and graduate programs on September 9. The prize-winners were awarded USD $20,000 along with an offer for a position at any of the international firm’s 15 studios. From a pool of over 50 applicants, the prize-winners Mikiko Takasago from Japan, M.Arch 1, José Carlos García from Mexico, M.Arch 2, and undergraduate Luciano Meghini from Italy, B.Arch, were selected.

Foster + Partners Breaks Ground on Shanghai Suhewan Skyscraper

Work has begun on Foster + Partners' 200-meter-high Suhewan Skyscraper in Shanghai. Designed as part of a larger regeneration plan, the 42 story tower will be built for property development company China Resources Land. The first office tower in the residential district, the project is part of a larger move to make Shanghai a top financial and technology center by 2020. Designed as a landmark development in the Suhewan East Urban Complex, the skyscraper will open up to views of Pudong, Bund and the Huangpu River.

Foster + Partners Breaks Ground on Shanghai Suhewan Skyscraper - Image 1 of 4Foster + Partners Breaks Ground on Shanghai Suhewan Skyscraper - Image 2 of 4Foster + Partners Breaks Ground on Shanghai Suhewan Skyscraper - Image 3 of 4Foster + Partners Breaks Ground on Shanghai Suhewan Skyscraper - Image 4 of 4Foster + Partners Breaks Ground on Shanghai Suhewan Skyscraper - More Images

Mecanoo and Metaform Win Mondorf-les-Bains Velodrome and Sports Complex

Mecanoo and Metaform Architects have won a competition to design a new Velodrome and Sports Complex in Mondorf-les-Bains, Luxembourg. Sited in the countryside outside the city, the project was designed as a destination for recreation. The new project will include a new national velodrome with an aquatic centre, multisport hall and climbing wall. The design aims to be a sporting hub that could host national and international cycling events while also remaining open to the community and future international school on site.

Mecanoo and Metaform Win Mondorf-les-Bains Velodrome and Sports Complex - Image 1 of 4Mecanoo and Metaform Win Mondorf-les-Bains Velodrome and Sports Complex - Image 2 of 4Mecanoo and Metaform Win Mondorf-les-Bains Velodrome and Sports Complex - Image 3 of 4Mecanoo and Metaform Win Mondorf-les-Bains Velodrome and Sports Complex - Image 4 of 4Mecanoo and Metaform Win Mondorf-les-Bains Velodrome and Sports Complex - More Images+ 8

A Guide to Reducing Heat Loss in Homes

How much of our utility bills are devoted to heating and cooling? What is the R Value of fiberglass? In fact, what is an R Value?

Senator Windows answers these questions with a new infographic driven at “reducing heat loss in your home.” Aimed at both designers and home users, the infographic features a blend of statistics, diagrams, and definitions outlining how heat loss occurs, and how to mitigate against it.

We have republished the infographic below, offering a useful introduction to an almost universal issue in both the design and occupation of buildings.

Heneghan Peng's Moscow Contemporary Arts Center Scrapped Due to Funding Shortage

Heneghan Peng’s proposal for a new National Centre for Contemporary Arts (NCCA) in Moscow has been abandoned. As reported by the Calvert Journal, public officials were unwilling to foot the $240million bill for the flagship project, which Heneghan Peng were selected to design in late 2013.

Speaking to the Art Newspaper Russia, the head of the NCCA Sergey Perov confirmed that the project has been officially scrapped due to lack of funding.

Heneghan Peng's Moscow Contemporary Arts Center Scrapped Due to Funding Shortage - Image 1 of 4Heneghan Peng's Moscow Contemporary Arts Center Scrapped Due to Funding Shortage - Image 2 of 4Heneghan Peng's Moscow Contemporary Arts Center Scrapped Due to Funding Shortage - Image 3 of 4Heneghan Peng's Moscow Contemporary Arts Center Scrapped Due to Funding Shortage - Image 4 of 4Heneghan Peng's Moscow Contemporary Arts Center Scrapped Due to Funding Shortage - More Images

Post Post-Modernism: 10 Projects that Reinterpret the Movement for the Digital Age

It's no secret that post-modernism has, in recent years, experienced something of a revival. The much-maligned movement's exhuberant and joyful take on architecture is perhaps a solace in difficult moments. Or, for the more jaded among us, perhaps it simply lends itself to Instagram. 

That said, it's not quite the postmodernism that took off in the 60s. Post postmodernism is also concerned with history and context, but with contemporary spins made possible by new technologies. Installations and other temporary typologies also bring with them a fresh perspective, preserved forever on the internet for our vicarious enjoyment. But perhaps most crucially, it is no longer so wholly a reaction against the hegemony of modernism; something that the original postmodernists were fixated with. Today's postmodernism can be at once joyful and reserved, vernacular and high-tech. 

Post Post-Modernism: 10 Projects that Reinterpret the Movement for the Digital Age - Image 11 of 4Post Post-Modernism: 10 Projects that Reinterpret the Movement for the Digital Age - Image 18 of 4Post Post-Modernism: 10 Projects that Reinterpret the Movement for the Digital Age - Image 25 of 4Post Post-Modernism: 10 Projects that Reinterpret the Movement for the Digital Age - Image 30 of 4Post Post-Modernism: 10 Projects that Reinterpret the Movement for the Digital Age - More Images+ 65

Venice Biennale’s ‘Lightbox’ Exhibition Explores Material Memory

Venice Biennale’s ‘Lightbox’ Exhibition Explores Material Memory - Featured Image
Still from the PLANE-SITE video. Image Courtesy of PLANE-SITE

The European Culture Center’s Time Space Exhibition during the Venice Biennale 2018 features a new short film depicting the spatial qualities of light in architectural design, both as a material and metaphor.

This collaboration between architect and professor Jorge L. Hernández and photographer Carlos Domenech explores their endeavors in providing a lighting-based design solution for the Williamsburg, Virginia courthouse. Battling the issues of security and privacy of the court with the need for natural daylight, Hernández recreated the cupola, a vernacular roof turret intended for ventilation for illumination instead. Light, entering the courtroom from above, transforms the previously dull space and becomes, “an allegory for justice.”

Venice Biennale’s ‘Lightbox’ Exhibition Explores Material Memory

The European Culture Center’s Time Space Exhibition during the Venice Biennale 2018 features a new short film depicting the spatial qualities of light in architectural design, both as a material and metaphor.

This collaboration between architect and professor Jorge L. Hernández and photographer Carlos Domenech explores their endeavors in providing a lighting-based design solution for the Williamsburg, Virginia courthouse. Battling the issues of security and privacy of the court with the need for natural daylight, Hernández recreated the cupola, a vernacular roof turret intended for ventilation for illumination instead. Light, entering the courtroom from above, transforms the previously dull space and becomes, “an allegory for justice”.

3D Cementitious Panel Designed to Protect Homes Against Natural Disasters

3D Cementitious Panel Designed to Protect Homes Against Natural Disasters - Featured Image
© Magdalena Petrova

Material manufacturer Re-Structure Group has begun using a new 3D cementitious sandwich panel in the United States to help protect homes during natural disasters. As CNBC reports, the material has been widely used around the world, but is now being tested in the United States. Designed for mass production, the panels are fireproof, seismic resistant beyond any earthquake recorded in human history, and are hurricane resistant. The material is made as a sustainable and resilient building system that aims to reshape the U.S. housing market.

Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM Among Teams Competing For Multi-Billion Chicago O’Hare Contract

Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM are among twelve leading architecture teams vying to work on the Chicago O'Hare International Airport expansion. The city’s request for qualifications calls for demolishing O'Hare's Terminal 2 to replace it with a global concourse and terminal for both domestic and international flights from United and American Airlines. The city’s Department of Procurement Services estimates the total costs of the expansion process (from design through construction) will cost an approximate $8.7 billion. Known as O’Hare 21, the project represents O’Hare’s first major overhaul in 25 years.

Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM Among Teams Competing For Multi-Billion Chicago O’Hare Contract - Image 1 of 4Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM Among Teams Competing For Multi-Billion Chicago O’Hare Contract - Image 2 of 4Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM Among Teams Competing For Multi-Billion Chicago O’Hare Contract - Image 3 of 4Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM Among Teams Competing For Multi-Billion Chicago O’Hare Contract - Image 4 of 4Studio Gang, BIG, Calatrava and SOM Among Teams Competing For Multi-Billion Chicago O’Hare Contract - More Images

SLO Architecture Builds Floating Harvest Dome in Grand Rapids

SLO Architecture has built Harvest Dome 3.0, a floating dome project made to celebrate the riparian heritage of Grand Rapids. Made with local materials harvested from the Grand River industry, the 20-foot-diameter orb would be constructed from brightly colored surplus seat-belts and studded with rearview mirrors, set atop a ring of 128 repurposed two-liter soda bottles. The project explores the city’s legacy of manufacturing and a history of production.

SLO Architecture Builds Floating Harvest Dome in Grand Rapids - Image 1 of 4SLO Architecture Builds Floating Harvest Dome in Grand Rapids - Image 2 of 4SLO Architecture Builds Floating Harvest Dome in Grand Rapids - Image 3 of 4SLO Architecture Builds Floating Harvest Dome in Grand Rapids - Image 4 of 4SLO Architecture Builds Floating Harvest Dome in Grand Rapids - More Images+ 7

Sydney Opera House Becomes Carbon Neutral

The Sydney Opera House is celebrating a significant environmental milestone, having become carbon neutral five years ahead of schedule. For reducing its carbon dioxide emissions through efficiencies in waste and energy management, the Opera House was awarded certification from the Australian Government’s National Carbon Offset Standard (NCOS).

The sails of the Sydney Opera House were illuminated green on the night of Monday 24th September to celebrate the carbon neutral certification.

Sydney Opera House Becomes Carbon Neutral - Image 1 of 4Sydney Opera House Becomes Carbon Neutral - Image 2 of 4Sydney Opera House Becomes Carbon Neutral - Featured ImageSydney Opera House Becomes Carbon Neutral - Image 3 of 4Sydney Opera House Becomes Carbon Neutral - More Images

The Curious Case of a Doctored 19th Century Photo of Ruins in Athens

Researchers, academics and those with tireless curiosity will know the thrill of chasing down the details of something mysterious or unexplained. In this tweet thread from 2017, Paul Cooper noticed a difference in a nearly 100-year-old photo that led him to uncover the real story behind a strange "appendage" on the top of the Temple of Athenian Zeus. What follows is the Twitter equivalent of an architectural thriller. What is it? Why were depictions of the temple altered? Mr. Cooper takes us on a rollercoaster 18-tweet journey that uncovers the mystery.

The Famed and Forgotten Works of Uruguay's Modernists

The Famed and Forgotten Works of Uruguay's Modernists  - Featured Image
Vilamajó (Uruguay, second from left) with various members of the Board of Design Consultants for the UN Headquarters Building in 1947, including N. D. Bassov (Soviet Union), Gaston Brunfaut (Belgium), Ernest Cormier (Canada), Le Corbusier (France), Liang Seu-cheng (China), Sven Markelius (Sweden), Oscar Niemeyer (Brazil), Howard Robertson (United Kingdom), and G. A. Soilleux (Australia), as part of the Board of Design Consultants for the U.N. Headquarters Building in 1947. Image Courtesy of Courtesy the Facultad de Arquitectura Diseño y Ubranismo Montevideo, via Metropolis Magazine

Uruguay's architecture scene has long taken the backseat to those of its more popular neighbours. Brazil, to the north, has a modernist history that rivals (if not shades) that of its European peers; Chile, to the west, boasts an innovative climate for architecture unparalleled in the world today.

The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public

Bjarke Ingels Group has designed a cluster of buildings as the new home for Noma, one of the world’s most acclaimed restaurants. Situated between two lakes within the community of Christiania in Copenhagen. Built on the site of an ex-military warehouse once used to store mines for the Royal Danish Navy, the project is imagined as an intimate culinary garden village. With interiors completed in collaboration with Studio David Thulstrup, the project dissolves the restaurant’s individual functions into a collection of separate yet connected buildings.

The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public - Image 1 of 4The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public - Image 2 of 4The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public - Image 3 of 4The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public - Image 4 of 4The New Noma by Bjarke Ingels Group Opens to the Public - More Images+ 3

18 Fantastic Permeable Facades

18 Fantastic Permeable Facades - Image 18 of 4
© Hiroyuki Oki

18 Fantastic Permeable Facades - Image 1 of 418 Fantastic Permeable Facades - Image 2 of 418 Fantastic Permeable Facades - Image 3 of 418 Fantastic Permeable Facades - Image 4 of 418 Fantastic Permeable Facades - More Images+ 15

Recently, a new trend in architecture has emerged: Several of the latest projects highlighted by ArchDaily, including some winners in the Building of the Year Awards, are using permeable facades as an attractive option for their exterior finishes.

Better lighting, ventilation, and visibility are some of the advantages brought by this type of façades. Below is a selection of 15 images from prominent photographers such as Andrés Valbuena, Pedro Nuno Pacheco, and Koji Fuji Nacasa & Partners Inc.

The Intimate Work of Designing a Home

Designing a home is no mean feat. It is a project of intimate importance to the client, and one small enough in which each seemingly minor decision can have a significant experiential impact. But when clients are willing to take part in a collaborative process, it is possible to create magic. Architect and author Duo Dickinson describes in this op-ed his experience with such a project, looking back at the work with clear eyes and a vision to the future. This article was originally published by Dickinson on his blog Saved by Design. 

The Netherlands Unveils the World's First Recycled Plastic Bike Lane

When it comes to sustainability, the Netherlands has always been at the forefront. In recent news, Zwolle, one of the country's "greenest cities," implemented the world's first bicycle lane composed of post-consumer waste that would normally be discarded or incinerated. 

To create the material, Zwolle used old, plastic bottles, festival beer cups, cosmetic packaging, and plastic furniture. Still, in the pilot phase, the bike path contains 70% recycled plastic in its 30-meter pathway. Although, the city hopes to create a bike path made entirely of recycled plastic in the future. 

USUS Architectes Propose Modular Design for Millevaches Plateau Competition

French architects USUS Architectes reinvent the typical campground by designing a modular multipurpose structure as an ecological bivouac along the trekking routes in Massif Central, France. Together, the Association of Natural Parks of the Massif Central (IPAMAC), PNR Livradois-Forez, PNR Millevaches in Limousin, and the International Center for Art and Landscape (CIAP) wanted to tackle the lack of suitable accommodation along the trails. After deliberating from over 64 proposals, the agencies ultimately selected Peaks + Simon BOUDVIN and USUS + Zebra3 as project co-laureates of the competition.

USUS Architectes Propose Modular Design for Millevaches Plateau Competition - Image 1 of 4USUS Architectes Propose Modular Design for Millevaches Plateau Competition - Image 2 of 4USUS Architectes Propose Modular Design for Millevaches Plateau Competition - Image 3 of 4USUS Architectes Propose Modular Design for Millevaches Plateau Competition - Image 4 of 4USUS Architectes Propose Modular Design for Millevaches Plateau Competition - More Images+ 5

Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years

Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years - Featured Image
Courtesy of Office Ou

Office Ou, a Toronto-based landscape design firm, in collaboration with INOSTUDIO Architects, has designed a new public school for the historic Smíchov district of Prague. The initial competition, organized by the Centre for Central European Architecture, chose the Office Ou & INOSTUDIO design out of 66 anonymous submissions. This school would be the first new public school built in Prague's urban center in close to 100 years.

Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years - Image 1 of 4Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years - Image 2 of 4Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years - Image 3 of 4Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years - Image 4 of 4Office Ou Designs First Urban Public School in Central Prague in Nearly 100 Years - More Images+ 10

This Brazilian Resort is the Perfect Location for a Wes Anderson Film

The entertainment industry frequently captures unusual architecture from theme parks that explore bygone eras to remote locales in the hills of Las Vegas that often go unseen.

A two-hour drive from Rio de Janeiro's renowned beaches you can find a 20th century French Normandy building in the state's sierra region: The Palácio Quitandinha.

Pablo Escobar's Former Residence in Medellín Will Be Demolished to Build a Public Park

After a series of failed attempts, the Monaco building in Medellín will finally be demolished at the beginning of 2019, according to the Colombian newspaper El Tiempo.

The Monaco building, which was converted into a municipal asset this year, was the residence of the late drug trafficker Pablo Escobar in the El Poblado neighborhood of Medellín. In January of 1988, a car bomb with 80 kilograms of dynamite exploded in front of the building giving rise to a series of attacks between the drug cartels in Medellín.

ZNERA Proposes a Network of Smog Filtering Towers To Combat Delhi's Rising Pollution Levels

Dubai-based architecture firm Znera Space have released "The Smog Project," a design to clean the air in Delhi, one of the world's most polluted cities. Shortlisted in the World Architecture Festival's Experimental Project Category, the Smog Project hopes to address Delhi’s noxious air quality by adding a network of smog filtering towers throughout the entire city. India's capital has become known for toxic smog levels from overcrowding and industrial waste. Znera's proposal hopes to cleanse the smog chamber and generate smog free air.

ZNERA Proposes a Network of Smog Filtering Towers To Combat Delhi's Rising Pollution Levels - Image 1 of 4ZNERA Proposes a Network of Smog Filtering Towers To Combat Delhi's Rising Pollution Levels - Image 2 of 4ZNERA Proposes a Network of Smog Filtering Towers To Combat Delhi's Rising Pollution Levels - Image 3 of 4ZNERA Proposes a Network of Smog Filtering Towers To Combat Delhi's Rising Pollution Levels - Image 4 of 4ZNERA Proposes a Network of Smog Filtering Towers To Combat Delhi's Rising Pollution Levels - More Images+ 27

How to Generate Content That’s Interesting for Architects (Part 3: The title is Key)

In our last two articles we’ve given you a set of tips for presenting your products and materials to architects through content that they value so that you can develop interest in your brand. This strategy is called Content Marketing and its purpose is to give such useful information that potential clients become loyal to your products. Content Marketing can take the form of online articles, videos and tutorials that target a specific audience.

In this edition, we’ll be focusing on important tips for generating engaging titles and attractive images that help to successfully deliver your message.

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