
Glass
C/Z House / SAMI-arquitectos

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Architects: SAMI-arquitectos
- Year: 2010
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Manufacturers: panoramah!®
Lawrence Public Library / Multistudio

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Architects: Multistudio
- Year: 2014
Supreme Court of the Netherlands / KAAN Architecten

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Architects: KAAN Architecten
- Area: 18000 m²
- Year: 2016
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Professionals: Arup, BAM Bouw en Techniek, CBB, Consortium Poort van Den Haag, PGGM, +3
The Pont de Sèrves Towers – Citylights Renovation / Dominique Perrault Architecture

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Architects: Dominique Perrault Architecture
- Area: 919230 m²
- Year: 2016
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Manufacturers: Alucobond
Dental Clinic Adriana García / NAN arquitectos
São Luís Sports & Arts Gymnasium / Urdi Arquitetura

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Architects: Urdi Arquitetura
- Area: 9062 m²
- Year: 2015
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Professionals: Companhia de Projetos, Franco Associados, Loudness, LS Sistemas, MGA, +3
The Little Red Ants / PRODUCE

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Architects: PRODUCE
- Area: 170 ft²
- Year: 2015
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Professionals: Sound Materials Pte Ltd, Teck Lee Carpenters, Wah Chye Engineering Work
Dormy Inn Premium Garosugil / PLANEARTH Architects

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Architects: PLANEARTH Architects
- Area: 9949 m²
- Year: 2014
Cabañeros National Park Visitors Center and Interactive Museum / Álvaro Planchuelo
Laguna Condores Showroom / Fones Arquitectos

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Architects: Fones Arquitectos
- Area: 100 m²
- Year: 2015
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Professionals: Constructora Socovesa Santiago, Santolaya Ingenieros Consultores
Public Service Hall in Tianeti / MHD Group
HUB 4.0 / Nika Vorotyntseva
University of Arkansas Champions Hall / SmithGroup

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Architects: SmithGroup
- Area: 67277 ft²
- Year: 2015
JTI Headquarters / SOM
Lotus Square Art Center / Raynon Chui Design

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Architects: Raynon Chui Design
- Area: 3000 m²
- Year: 2014
AD Classics: Jyväskylä University Building / Alvar Aalto

Jyväskylä, a city whose status as the center of Finnish culture and academia during the nineteenth century earned it the nickname “the Athens of Finland,” awarded Alvar Aalto the contract to design a university campus worthy of the city’s cultural heritage in 1951. Built around the pre-existing facilities of Finland’s Athenaeum, the new university would be designed with great care to respect both its natural and institutional surroundings.
The city of Jyväskylä was by no means unfamiliar to Aalto; he had moved there as a young boy with his family in 1903 and returned to form his practice in the city after qualifying as an architect in Helsinki in 1923. He was well acquainted with Jyväskylä’s Teacher Seminary, which had been a bastion of the study of the Finnish language since 1863. Such an institution was eminently important in a country that had spent most of its history as part of either Sweden or Russia. As such, the teaching of Finnish was considered an integral part of the awakening of the fledgling country’s national identity.[1]




















