Paula Pintos

Architect based in Buenos Aires. Since 2019, she has been part of the content team at ArchDaily. As an editor, she has been involved in developing architectural narratives and criticism, as well as in architectural curation, communications, and interviews, while collaborating with architects worldwide to showcase their work online.

BROWSE ALL FROM THIS AUTHOR HERE

Riken Yamamoto: Get to Know the 2024 Pritzker Winner's Work

Subscriber Access | 

This year's Pritzker Prize has been awarded to Riken Yamamoto, a Beijing-born architect who shortly after World War II established himself in Yokohama, Japan where he would develop a profound interest in architecture and how it could shape the lives of individuals and society. Yamamoto founded his practice, Riken Yamamoto & Field Shop, in 1973, only five years after graduating from ​​Nihon University, Department of Architecture, College of Science and Technology, and after receiving his Master of Arts in Architecture from Tokyo University of the Arts, Faculty of Architecture in 1971. Since then, Yamamoto has been a professor and visiting professor in various universities and institutions including the Kogakuin University Department of Architecture, the Yokohama Graduate School of Architecture, and the Tokyo University of the Arts.

Riken Yamamoto: Get to Know the 2024 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 4 of 4Riken Yamamoto: Get to Know the 2024 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 6 of 4Riken Yamamoto: Get to Know the 2024 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 3 of 4Riken Yamamoto: Get to Know the 2024 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 1 of 4Riken Yamamoto: Get to Know the 2024 Pritzker Winner's Work - More Images+ 43

Taming Exterior Greenery: Landscape Design for Houses in Natural Environments

A healthy environment that is also visually appealing in our homes has become increasingly sought when it comes to designing houses and residential spaces, especially during the world’s current context. One of the most successful ways of achieving this is through a thoughtful design of the landscape that complements the built project. The art of landscaping is the arrangement of nature’s raw material elements, like vegetation and planting, combined with nonliving elements, such as exterior structures, paving, and decking, in order to create site-specific solutions that enhance the exterior spaces of a project.  

Taming Exterior Greenery: Landscape Design for Houses in Natural Environments - Image 1 of 4Taming Exterior Greenery: Landscape Design for Houses in Natural Environments - Image 2 of 4Taming Exterior Greenery: Landscape Design for Houses in Natural Environments - Image 3 of 4Taming Exterior Greenery: Landscape Design for Houses in Natural Environments - Image 4 of 4Taming Exterior Greenery: Landscape Design for Houses in Natural Environments - More Images+ 29

David Chipperfield: Get to Know the 2023 Pritzker Winner's Work

Subscriber Access | 

The 2023 Pritzker Prize has been awarded to Sir David Chipperfield, London-born, architect, urban planner, and activist. David Chipperfield, founded his architectural practice in 1985 in London under the name of David Chipperfield Architects, after shaping his career working with renowned architects such as Norman Foster, Richard Rogers, and Douglas Stephen. He studied art and architecture at the Kingston School of Art, graduating in 1976, and continued his studies at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, concluding in 1980. Today, David Chipperfield Architects has expanded to include offices in Berlin, Shanghai, Milan, and the latest office opened in Santiago de Compostela.

David Chipperfield: Get to Know the 2023 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 1 of 4David Chipperfield: Get to Know the 2023 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 2 of 4David Chipperfield: Get to Know the 2023 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 3 of 4David Chipperfield: Get to Know the 2023 Pritzker Winner's Work - Image 4 of 4David Chipperfield: Get to Know the 2023 Pritzker Winner's Work - More Images+ 30

Vienna Architecture Studios Through the Lens of Marc Goodwin

Subscriber Access | 

Architectural photographer Marc Goodwin adds one more photo series to his Atlas of Architectural Atmospheres, this time capturing 12 architecture offices in the Austrian capital of Vienna. The series includes the intimate workspaces of AllesWirdGut, Feld72 Architekten, querkraft architekten amongst others.

Goodwin has been working on this project for several years, and the collection holds photographs of work environments of architecture offices in Madrid, Frankfurt, Berlin, Istanbul, Seoul, and many more.

Vienna Architecture Studios Through the Lens of Marc Goodwin - Image 1 of 4Vienna Architecture Studios Through the Lens of Marc Goodwin - Image 2 of 4Vienna Architecture Studios Through the Lens of Marc Goodwin - Image 3 of 4Vienna Architecture Studios Through the Lens of Marc Goodwin - Image 4 of 4Vienna Architecture Studios Through the Lens of Marc Goodwin - More Images+ 53

Zaha Hadid Architects and Office for Visual Interaction: an Interview about Architecture, Light and a Longstanding Collaboration

Subscriber Access | 

With more than 900 projects in over 40 countries, every project that Zaha Hadid Architects designs and builds has an impact on the narrative of contemporary architecture. At ArchDaily, we know that each architectural project has a team of professionals behind it which makes it possible. In this edition of the ArchDaily Professionals Video Interviews, we talked to Johannes Schafelner, associate director at Zaha Hadid Architects, and Enrique Peiniger, founder of OVI-Office for Visual Interaction about their long-standing collaboration in projects merging design and lighting.

Zaha Hadid Architects and Office for Visual Interaction: an Interview about Architecture, Light and a Longstanding Collaboration - Image 1 of 4Zaha Hadid Architects and Office for Visual Interaction: an Interview about Architecture, Light and a Longstanding Collaboration - Image 2 of 4Zaha Hadid Architects and Office for Visual Interaction: an Interview about Architecture, Light and a Longstanding Collaboration - Image 3 of 4Zaha Hadid Architects and Office for Visual Interaction: an Interview about Architecture, Light and a Longstanding Collaboration - Image 4 of 4Zaha Hadid Architects and Office for Visual Interaction: an Interview about Architecture, Light and a Longstanding Collaboration - More Images+ 1

"Projects Cannot be Carried Out Without First Feeling and Understanding the Place": Marta Maccaglia of Asociación Semillas

Subscriber Access | 

Talking to architect Marta Maccaglia about her work is not just talking about architecture. Each of her projects derives from a participatory way of working, based on the approach and deep understanding of its users in their social and local context, their needs, the territory and the available resources, resulting in works that acquire a meaning beyond that of the function itself.

"The Idea of Elasticity and the Pliability of the Architectural Grid is a Fundamental Aspect of Our Thinking ": Florian Idenburg on Their Work With SO–IL

Subscriber Access | 

Fortunately, architecture has the power to solve numerous issues of the modern world and how we live in it, and there are infinite ways of doing so. However, not all architecture is effective in providing solutions while also being sensitive and thought-provoking. With a portfolio that is getting richer every year, SO–IL, an architecture practice based in New York City, has proven that buildings can actually do this and much more.

"The Idea of Elasticity and the Pliability of the Architectural Grid is a Fundamental Aspect of Our Thinking ": Florian Idenburg on Their Work With SO–IL - Image 1 of 4"The Idea of Elasticity and the Pliability of the Architectural Grid is a Fundamental Aspect of Our Thinking ": Florian Idenburg on Their Work With SO–IL - Image 2 of 4"The Idea of Elasticity and the Pliability of the Architectural Grid is a Fundamental Aspect of Our Thinking ": Florian Idenburg on Their Work With SO–IL - Image 3 of 4"The Idea of Elasticity and the Pliability of the Architectural Grid is a Fundamental Aspect of Our Thinking ": Florian Idenburg on Their Work With SO–IL - Image 4 of 4The Idea of Elasticity and the Pliability of the Architectural Grid is a Fundamental Aspect of Our Thinking : Florian Idenburg on Their Work With SO–IL - More Images+ 11

Squire & Partners, SAWA and Buro Happold: Design, Engineering and Local Resources Come Together for the Agri-Tech Center in Cambodia

Subscriber Access | 

In these fast-paced and constantly evolving times, architecture has been adapting to new building technologies and complexities to serve today’s world needs. Teams of experts from all areas, architecture, engineering, construction, and a long list of professionals, come together to bring these solutions to our built environment. At ArchDaily we have been highlighting these actors in the architecture we curate and publish every day, but we often come across other types of projects, in which we spot different needs, and ways of building in certain places and communities, that equally require a highly qualified team, specific local techniques, and knowledge that are worth sharing. 

In this edition of the ArchDaily Professionals Video Interviews, we talked to Tim Gledstone, partner in Squire & Partners, Edward Dale-Harris founder of SAWA (Socially Active Workshop Architecture), and Matthew Duckett, Senior Structural Engineer in engineering and infrastructure firm Buro Happold. The three experts came together to design and build the community Agriculture Technology Center in Krong Samraong, Cambodia for the Green Shoots Foundation.

Squire & Partners, SAWA and Buro Happold: Design, Engineering and Local Resources Come Together for the Agri-Tech Center in Cambodia - Image 1 of 4Squire & Partners, SAWA and Buro Happold: Design, Engineering and Local Resources Come Together for the Agri-Tech Center in Cambodia - Image 2 of 4Squire & Partners, SAWA and Buro Happold: Design, Engineering and Local Resources Come Together for the Agri-Tech Center in Cambodia - Image 3 of 4Squire & Partners, SAWA and Buro Happold: Design, Engineering and Local Resources Come Together for the Agri-Tech Center in Cambodia - Image 4 of 4Squire & Partners, SAWA and Buro Happold: Design, Engineering and Local Resources Come Together for the Agri-Tech Center in Cambodia - More Images+ 4

Concrete Barrel Vaults Applied in 10 Projects of Contemporary Architecture

Subscriber Access | 

The oldest record of barrel vaults is estimated to date back to 4000 BC. These provided the spans in the Sumerian ziggurat at Nippur in Babylonia, built from fired bricks amalgamated with clay mortar. This type of vault was built as a continuous round arch and became a characteristic architectural element of Roman architecture, later used also in Renaissance architecture.

Concrete Barrel Vaults Applied in 10 Projects of Contemporary Architecture  - Image 1 of 4Concrete Barrel Vaults Applied in 10 Projects of Contemporary Architecture  - Image 2 of 4Concrete Barrel Vaults Applied in 10 Projects of Contemporary Architecture  - Image 3 of 4Concrete Barrel Vaults Applied in 10 Projects of Contemporary Architecture  - Image 4 of 4Concrete Barrel Vaults Applied in 10 Projects of Contemporary Architecture  - More Images+ 20

Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin

Subscriber Access | 
Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin - Featured Image
© Marc Goodwin

There is so much more to know about architects and their projects when you begin to learn the stories behind their work. When you know where and how they draw their inspiration from and how an idea becomes a reality that you can touch, feel and experience, you get a better idea of why the project ended up the way it did.

Together with photographer Marc Goodwin, as part of his project Atlas of Architectural Atmospheres this time in the city of Berlin, we had the opportunity to meet with German architect Christoph Hesse, of Christoph Hesse Architects, based in Korbach and Berlin, and we spoke about all these things that make up his idea of architecture and his work. Meeting a creator on their own workspace is also an added value; we went through different projects while looking at the physical models and the narrative of his work became a beautiful story about a place, a countryside town in Germany, its people, and their lives, and a sustainable future in nature.

Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin - Image 1 of 4Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin - Image 2 of 4Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin - Image 3 of 4Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin - Image 4 of 4Studio Visit: A Conversation with Christoph Hesse Architects in Their Workspace in Berlin - More Images+ 13

The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021

Subscriber Access | 
The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021 - Featured Image
The TIde. Image © Ben Luxmoore

Every year, ArchDaily's curatorial team publishes thousands of new architectural projects. From this experience, we know that no one builds alone and that these projects would not have been possible without the collaboration of many other professionals that are as much involved as the architects and designers themselves. 

The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021 - Image 1 of 4The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021 - Image 2 of 4The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021 - Image 3 of 4The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021 - Image 4 of 4The Professionals Involved in the Best Projects of 2021 - More Images+ 10

Heatherwick Studio, MNLA and Arup on their Collaborative Design for New York's Little Island Park

Subscriber Access | 

In this second edition of the ArchDaily Professionals Video Interviews, ArchDaily's Managing Editor, Christele Harrouk, met with Mat Cash, Group Leader of Heatherwick Studio, Signe Nielsen, MNLA's Founding Principal, and David Farnsworth, Arup Principal, to discuss their collaborative work on one of New York City's latest green areas, Little Island Park at Pier 55.

Lighting Design in Architecture: A Conversation with Hervé Descottes and Steven Holl

Subscriber Access | 

ArchDaily Professionals is an initiative that focuses on all of the collaborators involved in architecture and construction, who participated and are credited in the projects we have carefully curated and published. This project aims to recognize and highlight the best collaborators responsible for delivering the best architecture, by delivering valuable knowledge related to the different disciplines within our community. Today, we are launching a series of video interviews between architects and collaborating professionals, to learn more about their work and to understand the importance of these relationships to deliver high-quality architectural projects.

For this first interview, ArchDaily’s Managing Editor, Christele Harrouk, met with lighting design firm L’Observatoire International’s founder, Hervé Descottes, and American architect Steven Holl. In this moderated talk, we had the chance to speak to Hervé and Steven about their collaboration in three cultural projects in the United States: the Institute for Contemporary Art at VCU, the Winter Visual Arts Building, and Nancy and Rich Kinder Museum. In this conversation, we learned more about what lighting in architecture means to them, how space and light should be conceived and why a close collaboration between architects and lighting designers is crucial to architecture projects.

Lighting Design in Architecture: A Conversation with Hervé Descottes and Steven Holl - Image 1 of 4Lighting Design in Architecture: A Conversation with Hervé Descottes and Steven Holl - Image 2 of 4Lighting Design in Architecture: A Conversation with Hervé Descottes and Steven Holl - Image 3 of 4Lighting Design in Architecture: A Conversation with Hervé Descottes and Steven Holl - Image 4 of 4Lighting Design in Architecture: A Conversation with Hervé Descottes and Steven Holl - More Images+ 2

Brunnsparken / Bornstein Lyckefors

Subscriber Access | 
Brunnsparken  / Bornstein Lyckefors - Featured Image
Courtesy of Bornstein Lyckefors

Brunnsparken  / Bornstein Lyckefors - Image 1 of 4Brunnsparken  / Bornstein Lyckefors - Image 2 of 4Brunnsparken  / Bornstein Lyckefors - Image 3 of 4Brunnsparken  / Bornstein Lyckefors - Image 4 of 4Brunnsparken  / Bornstein Lyckefors - More Images+ 22

World Photography Day: 25 Emerging Architectural Photographers from Around the Globe

Subscriber Access | 

Architectural photography has developed into its own art form, and it might be as important as the built work itself. We consume architecture not only physically and spatially in a building but also through photographs. A good image reportage work can give the viewer a feeling of the atmosphere, senses, and design intentions the project may spark, without actually being in the place. Photography is also a way of documenting the project's process, the use of materials, lighting, and architectural elements, and as a result, tell a complete story behind a building.

To celebrate World Photography Day, we've gathered a list of 25 architectural photographers from around the world who are worth knowing - and following on Instagram. These emerging photographers have been selected for their ability to capture architecture each in their own unique ways. Get to know them!

World Photography Day: 25 Emerging Architectural Photographers from Around the Globe - Image 1 of 4World Photography Day: 25 Emerging Architectural Photographers from Around the Globe - Image 2 of 4World Photography Day: 25 Emerging Architectural Photographers from Around the Globe - Image 3 of 4World Photography Day: 25 Emerging Architectural Photographers from Around the Globe - Image 4 of 4World Photography Day: 25 Emerging Architectural Photographers from Around the Globe - More Images+ 21

3D Printing and Robotic Construction: HANNAH Office on their Experimental Prototype Ashen Cabin

HANNAH office, founded by Leslie Lok and Sasa Zivkovic, is a US-based architecture and research practice that has been experimenting with digital design and fabrication techniques across all types of projects ranging from furniture to urbanism. Both professors at Cornell University College of Architecture, Art, and Planning, Leslie and Sasa lead a studio with a focus on innovative design, where technology plays a crucial role in their work, combined with a sharp study of materials, new applications, and construction techniques, resulting in highly creative projects.

3D Printing and Robotic Construction: HANNAH Office on their Experimental Prototype Ashen Cabin - Image 1 of 43D Printing and Robotic Construction: HANNAH Office on their Experimental Prototype Ashen Cabin - Image 2 of 43D Printing and Robotic Construction: HANNAH Office on their Experimental Prototype Ashen Cabin - Image 3 of 43D Printing and Robotic Construction: HANNAH Office on their Experimental Prototype Ashen Cabin - Image 4 of 43D Printing and Robotic Construction: HANNAH Office on their Experimental Prototype Ashen Cabin - More Images+ 21

Digitally Designed & Built Projects: Using Technology to Explore New Ways of Construction

By now,  it is clear that technology has taken over almost every aspect of our lives. It has changed the way we communicate, how we connect, how we work and study, and has even modified our buying and eating habits.  Architecture and construction were not the exceptions, and technology is also now present in the way it is being thought, designed, and built.

Digitally Designed & Built Projects: Using Technology to Explore New Ways of Construction - Image 1 of 4Digitally Designed & Built Projects: Using Technology to Explore New Ways of Construction - Image 2 of 4Digitally Designed & Built Projects: Using Technology to Explore New Ways of Construction - Image 3 of 4Digitally Designed & Built Projects: Using Technology to Explore New Ways of Construction - Image 4 of 4Digitally Designed & Built Projects: Using Technology to Explore New Ways of Construction - More Images+ 16

In Harmony with Nature Cafe / Reutov Design

Subscriber Access | 

Text Courtesy of Reutov Design. Among the endless movement of millions of people and cars, you often want to get in touch with nature. Here is an oasis in the midst of a raging stream. The concept of the cafe, developed by ReutovDesign studio, combines a creative interpretation of modern design and natural style.

In Harmony with Nature Cafe  / Reutov Design - Image 1 of 4In Harmony with Nature Cafe  / Reutov Design - Image 2 of 4In Harmony with Nature Cafe  / Reutov Design - Image 3 of 4In Harmony with Nature Cafe  / Reutov Design - Image 4 of 4In Harmony with Nature Cafe  / Reutov Design - More Images+ 6