1. ArchDaily
  2. Articles

Articles

How to Create Architectural Presentation Boards

 | Sponsored Content

Produce personalized presentation boards that distill complex concepts into simple visual representations with a few helpful tools and effects.

Freehand Stadium Drawings by Mohammad Pirdavari

Subscriber Access | 

To anyone enrolled in an architecture school, final year projects tend to be the perfect time to go all in. Whether you go for 3D visualizations or build remarkable models, your final presentation is the chance to display every conceptual and technical skill acquired throughout the years.

For his B.A. Final project, architect Mohammad Pirdavari of Ati-Naghsh Hamraz Consultants, presented his modernist stadium proposal in a series of freehand Airbrush drawings. His intricate graphics helped accentuate the stadiums’ raw material and detailed relationship between the main exposed structure, and the smaller covered one.

Freehand Stadium Drawings by Mohammad Pirdavari - Image 1 of 4Freehand Stadium Drawings by Mohammad Pirdavari - Image 2 of 4Freehand Stadium Drawings by Mohammad Pirdavari - Image 3 of 4Freehand Stadium Drawings by Mohammad Pirdavari - Image 4 of 4Freehand Stadium Drawings by Mohammad Pirdavari - More Images+ 26

How Modular Construction Could Offer a Lasting Solution in the Affordable Housing Crisis

Subscriber Access | 

This article was originally published in Autodesk's Redshift publication as "How Building Modular Homes can Help Fill the Affordable Housing Gap."

“Modular” isn’t a construction product; it’s a construction process. This is according to Tom Hardiman, executive director of the Modular Building Institute (MBI), whose members include more than 350 companies involved in the manufacturing and distribution of modular buildings, including multifamily homes.

CTBUH Names Norway's Mjøstårnet the Tallest Timber Building in the World

Subscriber Access | 

The Council for Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat has announced that Norway's Mjøstårnet tower is, at 85.4 meters, officially the world's tallest timber building. Beyond the unique distinction, the tower is also Norway's tallest mixed-use structure and third tallest building.

Infinity Pools in 15 Architecture Projects

Subscriber Access | 

There are few things that fascinate us more than the sea. Its contemplation arouses a sense of peace, while its colors, textures, movements and amplitude provide a scientifically proven effect of relaxation in our nervous system. Above all, it makes us realize how small we are in the universe. It is not by chance that a house facing the sea is a dream of consumption for many, let alone with a pool right in front of it. Infinity pools play with this feeling of infinite sea and sky. Through a well-elaborated set of levels and plans, they create an optical illusion that leaves everyone speechless, making pool water appear as if merged with the horizon, overflowing at one or more edges. But before you plan your photo on Instagram with a glass of sparkling wine in your hand, let's take a look at how these pools are built.

Infinity Pools in 15 Architecture Projects - Image 1 of 4Infinity Pools in 15 Architecture Projects - Image 2 of 4Infinity Pools in 15 Architecture Projects - Image 3 of 4Infinity Pools in 15 Architecture Projects - Image 4 of 4Infinity Pools in 15 Architecture Projects - More Images+ 15

From Climate Change to Global South: 11 Editors Choose 11 of our Best Articles

Back in 2008, ArchDaily embarked on a challenging mission: to provide inspiration, knowledge, and tools to the architects tasked with designing cities. In an effort to further align our strategy with these challenges, we recently introduced monthly themes in order to dig deeper into topics we find relevant in today’s architectural discourse. From architects who don't design to reframing climate change as a global issue, we are celebrating our 11th birthday by asking 11 editors and curators to choose ArchDaily's most inspiring articles.

24 Projects Shortlisted in 2019 RIBA East Awards

Subscriber Access | 

As part of the RIBA annual Regional Awards programme, 23 architectural works and one masterplan have been shortlisted for the RIBA East awards. These projects cover a range of types, from homes to schools to follies, and represent some of the finest work produced in Britain in the last year.

24 Projects Shortlisted in 2019 RIBA East Awards - Image 1 of 424 Projects Shortlisted in 2019 RIBA East Awards - Image 2 of 424 Projects Shortlisted in 2019 RIBA East Awards - Image 3 of 424 Projects Shortlisted in 2019 RIBA East Awards - Image 4 of 424 Projects Shortlisted in 2019 RIBA East Awards - More Images+ 21

50 AutoCAD Commands You Should Know

Subscriber Access | 

After spending countless hours in front of AutoCAD working on a project, you’re bound to have your own set of favorite commands to standardize a few steps. We also bet that you don’t have them all memorized or often forget them. To help you remember, we've made a list of 50 commands that can help you speed up your work game, discover new shortcuts, or come in use as a handy tool for when you forget what the command you need is called.

The following listing was developed and corroborated by our team for the 2013, 2014 and 2015 versions of AutoCAD in English. We also prepared a series of GIFs to visualize some of the trickier ones.

When you’ve finished reading, we would love to know what your favorite commands are (including those that we didn’t include). We will use your input to help us update the article!

Happy 11th Birthday to ArchDaily!

Subscriber Access | 

11 years ago, ArchDaily set out on a mission: to provide inspiration, knowledge, and tools to the architects tasked with designing for the 3 billion people that will move into cities in the next 40 years. A bold vision for a rapidly changing world.

Since then, the way we consume architecture has changed. Projects on the other side of the world no longer feel quite so far away, and inspiration can come from any project, at any scale, anywhere. The mission we set out with so many years ago has captured the passion of architects and architecture lovers worldwide: nearly half a million people visiting our sites daily in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Chinese. 

We are especially proud of our global reach. With more than 40,000 new articles and 4300 projects added to our site in the last year alone, we are committed to providing the most relevant resources to our readers to better their knowledge and appreciation for the field we all love. We are proud and excited to reach readers in every corner of the world, and we savor the opportunity to continue sharing the inspiration, knowledge, and tools needed to design a positive urbanizing world.

Glass in Retail & Commercial Architecture: Texture, Brightness and Color

Subscriber Access | 

Nowadays, new technologies for the treatment of glass provide new ways to use this material in architecture. Applied indoors, specifically in retail stores, glass in its different textures, colors, finishes and levels of transparency can allow the unobstructed view of certain products, hide more private areas without blocking the passage of light, and attract the attention of customers as focal points, among many other uses.

Review below a selection of applications in commercial projects.

When the Best Laid Plans Go Awry: What Went Wrong with New Orleans' Make It Right Homes?

This article was originally published on CommonEdge as "Rob Walker on the Mistakes of Brad Pitt's Make it Right."

I will start with a confession: I was part of the fawning media swarm that lauded and applauded the accomplishments of Make It Right, Brad Pitt’s bold attempt to rebuild a portion of the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans. The project was, it seemed once, one of the few post-Katrina success stories coming out of that flood-ravaged community.

ArchDaily's Top 11 Projects in 11 Years

Subscriber Access | 

ArchDaily turns 11! To commemorate the occasion, we want to share with you the 11 projects most visited by our readers during this incredible journey. From the indisputable and timeless classics from of designers like Le Corbusier and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, to the pioneering works of architects such as Zaha Hadid and OMA, passing through the delicate work of Gabinete de Arquitectura, these 11 examples teach us valuable lessons about architecture, most importantly: how to design for specific requirements without losing the creativity and beauty of architectural design.

On behalf of ArchDaily, we want to thank you for sharing with us the best architecture in the world, helping us to inspire professionals from all over the world to build better cities.

Sir Terry Farrell Speaks to Monocle on Design About His Six Decade Career in Architecture

Subscriber Access | 

Sir Terry Farrell to speak about his long and varied career in architecture. Farrell, who is known for his exuberantly postmodern works in Britain, tells of how he became interested in architecture, the role architects will play in our rapidly urbanizing world, and speaking openly about our cities. 

Architecture for Landscape: Lectures and Internships with Internationally-Renowned Architectural Firms

 | Sponsored Content

YACademy launches the second edition of Architecture for Landscape, a high-level training course offering 8 scholarships and internships in internationally-renowned architectural firms.

101 hours of lessons, a 32-hour workshop and internships/lectures held by internationally-renowned architectural firms like Stefano Boeri Architetti, Snøhetta, Hhf Architects, Rodrigo Duque Motta, Jean Nouvel Design, Rintala Eggerston, and Jensen & Skodvin.

Architecture for Landscape: Lectures and Internships with Internationally-Renowned Architectural Firms - Image 1 of 4Architecture for Landscape: Lectures and Internships with Internationally-Renowned Architectural Firms - Image 2 of 4Architecture for Landscape: Lectures and Internships with Internationally-Renowned Architectural Firms - Image 3 of 4Architecture for Landscape: Lectures and Internships with Internationally-Renowned Architectural Firms - Image 4 of 4Architecture for Landscape: Lectures and Internships with Internationally-Renowned Architectural Firms - More Images+ 1

Copper Cladding: A Glittering Room With Baroque Twists

Subscriber Access | 

This renovation project by Peter Ebner and friends ZT GmbH is about the history of a place and changing tastes and times. It is about not needing a large scale to radically improve the space around. It is about the beauty and character of the city with its reflected sparkling life, gloomy evening sky, raindrops and lights of passing cars. It is about people who are mostly in a hurry, but who still sometimes stop for a few seconds to take note of a special, glittering room.

A New TED Talk by Ronald Rael Puts Architecture's Power to Divide in the Spotlight

Subscriber Access | 

"Isn't it fascinating how this simple act of drawing a line on a map can transform the way we see and experience the world?" asks Ronald Rael in his December 2018 TED Talk. "And those lines on a map can create scars in the landscape and scars in our memories."

A Selection of the Most Representative Drawings by Yona Friedman

Subscriber Access | 

A Selection of the Most Representative Drawings by Yona Friedman - Image 1 of 4A Selection of the Most Representative Drawings by Yona Friedman - Image 2 of 4A Selection of the Most Representative Drawings by Yona Friedman - Image 3 of 4A Selection of the Most Representative Drawings by Yona Friedman - Image 4 of 4A Selection of the Most Representative Drawings by Yona Friedman - More Images+ 59

Yona Friedman is a French architect and urban planner with more than 92 years of experience that has led him to participate in numerous events, including the Venice Biennial and the Shanghai Biennial. One of his most important works was published in 1958, entitled L'Architecture Mobile, which exposed one of his most ambitious projects named: "La Ville Spatiale", a utopia that recycled mega-structures of existing cities to provide citizens with the chance to live with complete flexibility in their decisions.

China Projections

Subscriber Access | 
China Projections - Image 10 of 4
Image Courtesy of Martijn de Geus
. Fig.8 - Qing Dynasty - by Xu Yang - Springtime in the Capital

This article serves as a brief introduction to a way of thinking that I assume to be foreign and new to most of the readers. It is based on some observations I’ve made during the past 5 years as part of my PhD research into the comparison between two traditions of architectural representation, between China and Europe, under guidance of prof. Li Xiaodong at Tsinghua University in Beijing. With that in mind this article has no pretension, nor the proper length, to fully convey the complexity of the representations of architectural space in drawings from China, but should be seen as a first try to communicate some of these ideas to a wider audience.

China Projections - Image 1 of 4China Projections - Image 2 of 4China Projections - Image 3 of 4China Projections - Image 4 of 4China Projections - More Images+ 6

The Architecture of Memory: A Tale on the Importance of Design and Well-being

Subscriber Access | 

Architecture, in all its forms, has the innate ability to trigger our emotions and alter our perceptions. Consequently, a lot of light is currently being shed on the relation between architecture, landscape, and health.

In the 2018 edition of the Blank Space Fairytales Competition, Katie Flaxman from Studio 31 Landscape Architects, wrote a story of a father, Horace, an architect suffering from late-stage dementia and his offspring, Rowan. The fiction describes Horace’s journey in different healthcare institutions and how his presence in a building and landscape properly designed for well-being, improved his psychological and physical health.

Here are some excerpts from Flaxman's fictional story, illustrated by architectural artist Sam Wilson.

Why Equal Representation for Women in Architecture is Better for Everyone

Subscriber Access | 

This article is an updated version of its original post on March 15th, 2016.
"In the ongoing debate about women in the architecture profession, you rarely hear an argument for why equal representation is important; it's generally assumed to be an unquestionable moral imperative. However, in this article originally published on the Huffington Post as "Why Women's Leadership Is Essential for Architects," Lance Hosey argues that, regardless of your position on equality as a moral imperative, better representation of women in architecture could benefit everyone in the profession—in very tangible ways.

Today, on International Women's Day (March 8) we want to share again the American Institute of Architects (AIA) publication "Diversity in the Profession of Architecture," its first diversity report in a decade. The release follows the creation in December 2015 of the AIA's "Equity in Architecture Commission," a panel of twenty architects, educators, and diversity experts to investigate diversity and inclusion in the profession. The new report documents a survey of over 7,300 professional architects and students, including men and women, 79% of them whites and 21% people of color.

The Best Architecture Portfolio Designs

Subscriber Access | 

When applying for an architecture job, you need to make sure you have the perfect portfolio. While a clever and attractive business card might help you initially get a firm's attention, and a well-considered résumé or CV might help you prove your value, in most cases it will be your portfolio that makes or breaks your application. It's your portfolio that practices will use to measure your design sensibilities against the office's own style and to judge whether you match up to the talents claimed in your résumé.

After launching a call for our readers to send us their own portfolios so that we could share the best design ideas with the ArchDaily community, this selection below shows the best of the nearly 200 submissions we received, which were judged not on the quality of the architectural design they showed (though much of it was excellent) but instead the design quality of the portfolio itself. In making the selection, we were looking for attractive graphics, a clear presentation of the work itself, the formulation of a visual identity which permeated both the architectural designs and the portfolio design, and of course that elusive and much-prized attribute: "creativity."

The City in the Air by Arata Isozaki

Subscriber Access | 

Arata Isozaki, the Japanese architect and winner of the Pitzker Prize 2019, is not only renowned for his fruitful portfolio of works built all over the world (more than a hundred) but also for his continuous input to the theory of urbanism, including texts and proposals. 

It is precisely in the field of urbanism, that he developed one of his most interesting non-built projects: the futurist master plan, known as City in the Air, in the Shinjuku neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan.

Arata Isozaki's Palladium Nightclub Through the Lens of Timothy Hursley

Subscriber Access | 

In May 1985, an old theater and concert hall opened its doors to the public for the opening of a brand new nightclub in New York City. Located on 126 East 14th Street, the project was commissioned by entrepreneurs Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager, owners of the also famous club Studio 54, and was conceived as a vibrant and luminous independent structure arranged inside a rather classic shell, which appears as a beautiful backdrop behind the clean geometry of Isozaki.

As The New York Times pointed out in its May 20, 1985 edition: 'Arata Isozaki is at once a great eminence of Japanese architecture and a source of some of its freshest thinking. And all sides of Mr. Isozaki are visible in the Palladium'.

Arata Isozaki's Palladium Nightclub Through the Lens of Timothy Hursley - Image 1 of 4Arata Isozaki's Palladium Nightclub Through the Lens of Timothy Hursley - Image 2 of 4Arata Isozaki's Palladium Nightclub Through the Lens of Timothy Hursley - Image 3 of 4Arata Isozaki's Palladium Nightclub Through the Lens of Timothy Hursley - Image 4 of 4Arata Isozaki's Palladium Nightclub Through the Lens of Timothy Hursley - More Images+ 9

Offices and Workplaces: Examples in Plan

Subscriber Access | 

The functional distribution plays a fundamental role in the contemporary design of offices and places for work. The study of the architecture plan shows an interesting form of approach; not only allows for proper logistics and circulation but find efficient variations and innovations that will enable better workspaces that adapt to the current needs.

We have selected more than 50 plans of projects that will inspire you, recognizing the different ways in which architects have faced the challenge to design offices, in all different scale ranges.

60 Best Residential Axonometric Drawings

60 Best Residential Axonometric Drawings - Image 1 of 460 Best Residential Axonometric Drawings - Image 2 of 460 Best Residential Axonometric Drawings - Image 3 of 460 Best Residential Axonometric Drawings - Image 4 of 460 Best Residential Axonometric Drawings - More Images+ 54

During the professional life of an architect, the task of designing a residence can be a frequent occurrence. As the project develops, representing a vision in a determined space through a set of drawings is certainly one of the primary tasks of the design process. While the architect has a certain level of visual literacy, sometimes the client won't necessarily understand all the drawings. Going beyond the two-dimensionality of the plans, sections and elevations, axonometric perspectives are presented as an efficient instrument in the spatial representation of the project. When adding the notion of third dimension—and even though it’s presented by on a 2D sheet of paper—it gives a better understanding to those unfamiliar with technical drawings.

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.