1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture News

Architecture News

The Architectural Integrity of Josef Frank's Villa Beer May Be Irrevocably Lost

The Villa Beer (1929-1930) is considered to be one of Josef Frank's—the great Austro-Swedish architect—most important built projects. As reported by DisegnoDaily, the architectural integrity of the house—which was originally commissioned by the industrialist Julius Beer and built in the Viennese suburb of Hietzing—is now under threat despite being proposed for protection by the Austrian government as a historic site in 2007.

2016 New Zealand Architecture Awards Announced

The New Zealand Institute of Architects Incorporated has announced the winners of the 2016 New Zealand Architecture Awards, which recognizes the best works by New Zealand’s architects.

Out of the 28 winners selected from 50 shortlisted buildings, four projects have received special acknowledgment and have been named outstanding New Zealand Architects.

The winners of the 2016 New Zealand Architecture Awards are:

Ennead Architects Breaks Ground on Shanghai Planetarium

Ennead Architects has broken ground on the Shanghai Planetarium, a new 38,000-square-meter project that will define a new identity for the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum (SSTM) in the Lingang district of Shanghai, China.

Inspired by astronomical principles, the design is centered on the concept of orbital motion. “Each of the building’s three principal forma—the oculus, the inverted dome, and the sphere—acts as an astronomical instrument, tracking sun, moon, and stars, and reminding visitors that our concept of time originates in distant astronomical objects."

Ennead Architects Breaks Ground on Shanghai Planetarium - Image 1 of 4Ennead Architects Breaks Ground on Shanghai Planetarium - Image 2 of 4Ennead Architects Breaks Ground on Shanghai Planetarium - Image 3 of 4Ennead Architects Breaks Ground on Shanghai Planetarium - Image 4 of 4Ennead Architects Breaks Ground on Shanghai Planetarium - More Images+ 7

URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize

URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize - Image 7 of 4
© URBANLOGIC

The annual AAP American Architecture Prize, which recognizes outstanding architectural design, interior design, and landscape architecture worldwide, has given URBANLOGIC's Sichuan Arts Factory and Innovation Center a Silver Award in the mixed-use category. The panel of judges included Troy C. Therrien of the Guggenheim Foundation and Museum, Peggy Deamer of Yale University, Ben Van Berkel of UNStudio and Harvard University Graduate School of Design, and Alan Ricks and Michael Murphy, founders of Mass Design Group.

URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize - Image 1 of 4URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize - Image 2 of 4URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize - Image 3 of 4URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize - Image 4 of 4URBANLOGIC Arts Factory Awarded Silver at 2016 American Architecture Prize - More Images+ 10

The 7 Best Sustainable Design Courses in the United States

This article was originally published by Metropolis Magazine.

For many years now, climate change has been a major concern for architects and engineers— and with good reason. After all, the built environment contributes to over 39% of all CO2 emissions and over 70% of all electricity usage in the United States. Several architecture and design-based initiatives aim to guide architecture away from environmentally harmful practice and towards a more sustainable approach. Architecture 2030, one such initiative, believes that to incite design change we must begin at its source: architectural education.

CnT Architects Provide Two Options for Design of Aurobindo Pharma Towers in India

A competition for the design of the Aurobindo Pharma towers in the center of Hyderabad, India has declared CnT Architects as the winner. The 300-meter site is located in the center of Hitech City of Hyderabad. Two options exist for the final towers: one intends to accentuate the building's verticality while the other amplifies the horizontality of the site.

CnT Architects Provide Two Options for Design of Aurobindo Pharma Towers in India - Image 1 of 4CnT Architects Provide Two Options for Design of Aurobindo Pharma Towers in India - Image 2 of 4CnT Architects Provide Two Options for Design of Aurobindo Pharma Towers in India - Image 3 of 4CnT Architects Provide Two Options for Design of Aurobindo Pharma Towers in India - Image 4 of 4CnT Architects Provide Two Options for Design of Aurobindo Pharma Towers in India - More Images+ 9

Woods Bagot Begins Construction on Mixed-Use Tech Center in Singapore that You Can Ride Your Bike Through

Woods Bagot has begun construction on the redevelopment of the former Funan DigitaLife Mall, into a mixed retail, office, and residential project that will expand its previous function as the definitive IT mall in Singapore by incorporating the tech experience throughout its entirety.

The 887,000-square-foot project will be composed of a six-story retail, dining, and lifestyle podium, two six-story office towers, and one nine-story housing block. These programs will be connected vertically, and are designed to appeal to tech- and socially-savvy consumers interested in a creative environment.

Woods Bagot Begins Construction on Mixed-Use Tech Center in Singapore that You Can Ride Your Bike Through  - Image 1 of 4Woods Bagot Begins Construction on Mixed-Use Tech Center in Singapore that You Can Ride Your Bike Through  - Image 2 of 4Woods Bagot Begins Construction on Mixed-Use Tech Center in Singapore that You Can Ride Your Bike Through  - Image 3 of 4Woods Bagot Begins Construction on Mixed-Use Tech Center in Singapore that You Can Ride Your Bike Through  - Image 4 of 4Woods Bagot Begins Construction on Mixed-Use Tech Center in Singapore that You Can Ride Your Bike Through  - More Images+ 2

HOK and Hawkins\Brown Move Forward with Cardiff University Innovation Campus

Cardiff City Council has just approved the third and latest phase of Cardiff University's £300 million Innovation Campus. Hawkins\Brown and HOK each designed one building for the project, which will bring together researchers, students, investors, and businesses to work on technological innovations and new enterprises that aim to drive economic growth. The project is the latest development in Cardiff University's vision of embedding innovation within the university's fabric and generating a self-sustaining cycle of economic growth for the community as a whole.

HOK and Hawkins\Brown Move Forward with Cardiff University Innovation Campus - Image 1 of 4HOK and Hawkins\Brown Move Forward with Cardiff University Innovation Campus - Image 2 of 4HOK and Hawkins\Brown Move Forward with Cardiff University Innovation Campus - Image 3 of 4HOK and Hawkins\Brown Move Forward with Cardiff University Innovation Campus - Image 4 of 4HOK and Hawkins\Brown Move Forward with Cardiff University Innovation Campus - More Images+ 1

"Night White Skies" Podcast Explores How the Design of Our Environment and Our Bodies is Changing Architecture

Humanity is at a key moment in a larger story, one in which we are willfully manipulating both our global environments as well as our human bodies. The first is changing the makeup of the physical spaces we occupy and the second, the very body that perceives that space. At this intersection are the physical boundaries that define architectural space. Both our environments and our bodies are therefore open for design, and architecture has swerved in a new direction.

Created in response to these changes is a new podcast, “Night White Skies” w/ Sean Lally: A podcast about architecture's future, as both earth's environment & our human bodies are open for design. The podcast is about conversations with designers, engineers, and writers on the periphery of the architecture discipline, engaging in these developments from multiple fronts. Though the lens of discussion is architecture, it is necessary to engage a diverse range of perspectives to get a better picture of the events currently unfolding. This includes philosophers, cultural anthropologists, policy makers, scientists as well as authors of science fiction. Each individual’s work intersects this core topic, but from unique angles.

The House of Knowledge is a Gorgeous New School Above the Arctic Circle

Gallivare, Sweden might be known for its reindeer, but it's gradually undergoing an urban transformation. Liljewall Architects in collaboration with MAF architects have created Kunskapshuset (House of Knowledge), a new school, for the archetypal "arctic city."

The House of Knowledge is a Gorgeous New School Above the Arctic Circle - Image 1 of 4The House of Knowledge is a Gorgeous New School Above the Arctic Circle - Image 2 of 4The House of Knowledge is a Gorgeous New School Above the Arctic Circle - Image 3 of 4The House of Knowledge is a Gorgeous New School Above the Arctic Circle - Image 4 of 4The House of Knowledge is a Gorgeous New School Above the Arctic Circle - More Images+ 2

Robert Konieczny + KWK Promes' National Museum in Szczecin Named World Building of the Year 2016

Robert Konieczny + KWK Promes' National Museum in Szczecin - Dialogue Centre Przełomy has been named the World Building of the Year 2016 as the World Architecture Festival (WAF) in Berlin comes to a close. The project consists of an atmospheric underground museum below an expansive, undulating public plaza, adjacent to Barozzi Veiga's Mies van der Rohe Award-winning Philharmonic Hall Szczecin.

The National Museum in Szczecin - Dialogue Centre Przelomy is now the ninth project to hold the World Building of the Year title. Last year, the award was given to "The Interlace" by OMA and Buro Ole Scheeren.

Winners of the year's Future Project, Landscape, and Small Project awards were also announced. Read on to see the winning projects with comments from the jury. 

Hangzhou AN Interior's Black Cant System Named World's Best Interior of 2016

Hangzhou AN Interior Design's design for the retail brand Heike has been named the world's best interior of 2016. Announced at the INSIDE World Festival of Interiors in Berlin, which took place alongside the World Architecture Festival, the winner of the prize was selected from among 9 category winners, which in turn were picked out of a shortlist totaling 62 projects. The Black Cant System was also the winner of the retail category.

Described by the designers as a "glum interior" with a "futuristic melancholy atmosphere" for the retail brand, the centerpiece of the design is a large, dark wedge housing many of the store's functional components such as fitting rooms and staircases.

Read on for more images of, and for the full list of category winners.

Hangzhou AN Interior's Black Cant System Named World's Best Interior of 2016 - Featured ImageHangzhou AN Interior's Black Cant System Named World's Best Interior of 2016 - Image 1 of 4Hangzhou AN Interior's Black Cant System Named World's Best Interior of 2016 - Image 2 of 4Hangzhou AN Interior's Black Cant System Named World's Best Interior of 2016 - Image 3 of 4Hangzhou AN Interior's Black Cant System Named World's Best Interior of 2016 - More Images+ 8

Matt Emmett Wins Arcaid Award for World's Best Building Image 2016

Matt Emmett’s photograph of the East London Water Works Company covered reservoir in Finsbury Park, built 1868, has been named the winner of the 2016 Arcaid Images Architectural Photography Award. Announced on the final day of the World Architecture Festival (WAF) in Berlin, the image was notable for being the first winner to feature a historic location as its subject, and drew comparisons to a Piranesi print.

Meier, Viñoly + KPF Design Towers for "Waterline Square" Development in New York

Rafael Viñoly Architects, Richard Meier & Partners Architects, and Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) have been tapped to design towers for “Waterline Square,” a new luxury residential development located along the Hudson River in Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The three buildings will fit into five acre masterplan between West 59th and West 61st Streets on Riverside Drive, just two blocks north of BIG’s recently completed VIA 57 West.

First Renderings Revealed of Mecanoo + Beyer Blinder Belle's New York Public Library Renovation

The New York Public Library has revealed the first renderings of Mecanoo and Beyer Blinder Belle’s renovation of the NYPL’s Mid-Manhattan Library at the corner of 5th Avenue and 40th Street, diagonally across from the library’s main branch, the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building on Bryant Park. The $200 million project will increase seats, expand services and add public space to the building, which receives 1.7 million annual visits and constitutes the NYPL’s largest circulating branch.

“New Yorkers will soon have the central circulating library that they need and deserve,” said NYPL President Tony Marx. “This library will transform lives by providing books, classes, and programs for New Yorkers of all ages, and it will transform our city – as it will be a model for how libraries can strengthen communities.”

10 Teams Shortlisted in Competition for New National Holocaust Memorial in London

The Government of the United Kingdom and competition organizer Malcolm Reading Consultants have announced the ten architect teams selected to envision designs for the new National Memorial to the Holocaust, to be located next to the UK Parliament. Designs will encompass a “striking” new National Memorial in Victoria Gardens, as well as a possible below ground Learning Center.

The 10 shortlisted teams were selected from nearly 100 entries from teams across the globe by a jury made up of notable figures in British culture, religion and architecture, including Director of Stanton Williams Architects, Paul Williams; former Serpentine Galleries Director Dame Julia Peyton-Jones; and National September 11 Memorial and Museum Director, Alice M Greenwald.

How Toyo Ito is Embarking on a "New Career Epoch" With Small-Scale Community Architecture

This article was originally published on Autodesk's Redshift publication as "Toyo Ito’s Next Architectural Feat: Revitalizing Omishima Island in Japan."

Last year, as construction at his National Taichung Theater in Taiwan was winding down, Toyo Ito found himself at a crossroads.

A 10-year project in the making, the gargantuan cultural beacon is made of biomorphically curved concrete walls that wind together like a knot of arteries, creating an otherworldly experience for arts patrons. It’s every bit the landmark project you’d expect from 2013’s Pritzker Prize Laureate, but its rapidly approaching completion triggered a vital question: Where to go from here?

California College of the Arts Selects Studio Gang for New San Francisco Campus

The California College of the Arts (CCA) has selected Studio Gang out of three finalists to design an expanded art and design college campus for the school in San Francisco. Currently split between San Francisco and Oakland, CCA’s expansion in San Francisco will allow all of the school’s programs to be housed in one location.

Over the next five years, Studio Gang and CCA will collaborate to create a new campus to host 2,000 students, 600 faculty members, 250 staff members, and 34 academic programs, and to be a model of sustainable construction and practice.

Experience the Beauty of Norwegian Architecture with This Time-Lapse Video

As the second chapter in his series, Iconic Norway, Alejandro Villanueva has released a time-lapse of the Trollstigen Visitor Center, a project by Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekters for the Norwegian Public Roads Administration in Oslo, Norway.

Experience the Beauty of Norwegian Architecture with This Time-Lapse Video - Featured ImageExperience the Beauty of Norwegian Architecture with This Time-Lapse Video - Image 1 of 4Experience the Beauty of Norwegian Architecture with This Time-Lapse Video - Image 2 of 4Experience the Beauty of Norwegian Architecture with This Time-Lapse Video - Image 3 of 4Experience the Beauty of Norwegian Architecture with This Time-Lapse Video - More Images

Study John Pawson's Interiors of the New London Design Museum

This month London's Design Museum will officially open its new home on Kensington High Street. The project, which has been redeveloped and designed in collaboration with Rotterdam-based practice OMA and London-based studio Allies & Morrison, has seen a Grade II* Listed Modernist monument sensitively restored into contemporary galleries. For John Pawson—who has been commissioned to create "a series of calm, atmospheric spaces" ordered around a large, oak-lined atrium—this scheme marks his first major public work.

Study John Pawson's Interiors of the New London Design Museum - Image 4 of 4Study John Pawson's Interiors of the New London Design Museum - Image 3 of 4Study John Pawson's Interiors of the New London Design Museum - Image 1 of 4Study John Pawson's Interiors of the New London Design Museum - Image 2 of 4Study John Pawson's Interiors of the New London Design Museum - More Images+ 12

5 Firms Shortlisted for 2017 MoMA PS1 Young Architects Program

MoMA P.S.1 has named five finalists competing in the 2017 Young Architects Program (YAP).

Now in it’s 17th year, the competition was founded to offer emerging architectural talent the opportunity to design a temporary, outdoor installation within the walls of the P.S.1 courtyard for MoMA’s annual summer “Warm-Up” series. Architects are challenged to develop creative designs that provide shade, seating and water, while working within guidelines that address environmental issues, including sustainability and recycling.

World Architecture Festival Awards 2016 Announces Day 2 Winners

The second group of winners of the World Architecture Festival’s (WAF) 2016 category awards have been announced today on day 2 of the event, held this year in Berlin, Germany.

The 16 Day 2 winners will now go on to compete against the 14 Day 1 winners for the title of 2016 World Building of the Year. The projects will be presented in front of a Super Jury, which includes Kai-Uwe Bergmann (BIG), Louisa Hutton (Sauerbruch Hutton), David Chipperfield, Ole Scheeren, and ArchDaily's co-founder and Editor-in-Chief David Basulto.

Check out the Day 1 winners here and view the Day 2 winners after the break.

Frank Gehry and Maya Lin Awarded Obama's Presidential Medal of Freedom

President Obama has named architects Frank Gehry and Maya Lin among the 21 recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country’s highest civilian honor. Established in its current decoration in 1963 by President John F. Kennedy, the award is presented to “individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.”

A Virtual Look Into Mies van der Rohe's Core House

Architecture depends on its time. It is the crystallization of its inner structure, the slow unfolding of its form. – Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

In 1951, Mies van der Rohe designed the Core House, a participative design structure which could be completed by its inhabitants.

This flexible model challenged certain architectural concepts, explored new industrial technologies, and proposed a modular system to improve the quality and affordability of housing.

Oops! We don't have this page.

But you can browse the last one: 417

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