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Casa na Mata / NITSCHE ARQUITETOS
Art’otel / ADP Architects
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Architects: ADP Architects
- Area: 6500 m²
- Year: 2013
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Manufacturers: Kymo
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Professionals: Digital Space
B.S.R 3 / Yashar Architects

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Architects: Yashar Architects
- Area: 41400 m²
- Year: 2013
La Leroteca / Lacaja Arquitectos
Studio for Arranz Bravo / Garcés - De Seta - Bonet
Catholic Leadership Centre / Woods Bagot
Lima de Freitas School Renovation / Ricardo Carvalho + Joana Vilhena Arquitectos

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Architects: Ricardo Carvalho + Joana Vilhena Arquitectos
- Year: 2012
Classic Architecture with a Social Agenda (1960-Today)

“Ninety-five percent of the world’s designers focus all of their efforts on developing products and services for the richest 10% of the world’s customers.” - Paul Polak, Design for the 90% [1]
The vast majority of contemporary architectural practice today is service industry based, where a fee-paying client commissions a firm for a defined scope of services. Master of self-effacing cynicism Philip Johnson wryly accepted this structure, calling architects “high-class whores.” The recent surge of interest in designing for traditionally underserved communities, from groups such as Architecture for Humanity, MASS Design, Project H and Public Architecture challenges the traditional firm model. The Prizker Prize jury’s recognition of Shigeru Ban’s humanitarian designs highlights that high design and a socially conscious practice are not mutually exclusive.
Believing that architecture can alleviate societal ills and improve the quality of life for all people is not a new concept. Two eras, the 1920s and 1960s-70s, brought a social agenda to the forefront of the discourse. Hindsight reveals flaws of each. Modernism’s utopian visions for public housing and urban renewal are blamed for the detrimental impact of Post-WWII urban housing projects; participatory design in the 1960s and 70s is criticized for ceding expertise in the name of consensus, ending with projects that were no better than the status quo. Despite this, there are lessons to be learned from those who emphasized the social and humanitarian role of architecture.
Tree House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura
John McAslan + Partners Selected for Chinese Biodome
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John McAslan + Partners has been selected to design a Botanical Gardens and Research Center in Dongguan, China. The scheme features a large gridshell biodome which engages with landscaped mounds both inside and outside the structure. Around the base of the roof structure, a ribbon of glass will provide views which connect these interior and exterior landscapes.
Read on for more detail on the design
Santral Istanbul Museum of Contemporary Arts / NSMH + EAA - Emre Arolat Architecture

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Architects: EAA - Emre Arolat Architecture, NSMH
- Area: 6800 m²
- Year: 2007
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Professionals: Dinamik, Trafo, Tuncel Engineering
Trollbeads House / BBP Arkitekter

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Architects: BBP Arkitekter
- Year: 2013
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Professionals: Kai Andersen A/S, Orbicon
Casa Moon / ROBLESARQ
House In Travesseres / Garcés - De Seta - Bonet
Auditorium And Congress Center Expo 2008 / Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

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Architects: Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos
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Manufacturers: Effisus
Bozen Waste to Energy Plant / Cl&aa Architects

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Architects: Cl&aa Architects
- Area: 24 m²
- Year: 2014
Casa 7A / Arquitectura en Estudio + Natalia Heredia
Chemical Engineering & Chemistry Building / Universidad Nacional de Colombia

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Architects: Universidad Nacional de Colombia
- Area: 7226 m²
- Year: 2013

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