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Spotlight: Steven Holl

As the founder of Steven Holl Architects, Steven Holl (born December 9, 1947) is recognized as one of the world's leading architects, having received prestigious awards for his contributions to design over the course of nearly forty years in practice, including the prestigious Alvar Aalto Medal in 1998, the AIA Gold Medal in in 2012, and the 2014 Praemium Imperiale. In 1991, Time Magazine named Holl America's Best Architect. He is revered for his ability to harness light to create structures with remarkable sensitivity to their locations, while his written works have been published in many preeminent volumes, sometimes collaborating with world-renowned architectural thinkers such as Juhani Pallasmaa and Alberto Pérez-Gómez.

Spotlight: Steven Holl - More Images+ 21

Spotlight: Ma Yansong

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Founder of the innovative architecture firm MAD Architects, Ma Yansong (born 26 November 1975) has helped to give China a name in the international architecture scene. The first Chinese architect to receive a RIBA fellowship, Ma explores contemporary architecture in relation to traditional eastern values of nature, resulting in buildings that are complex and contextually aware, but sometimes even surreal.

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Spotlight: Zaha Hadid

In her lifetime, Pritzker prize-winning architect, fashion designer and artist Zaha Hadid (31 October 1950 – 31 March 2016) became one of the most recognizable faces of our field. Revered and denounced in equal measure for the sensuous curved forms for which she was known, Hadid rose to prominence not solely through parametricism but by designing spaces to occupy geometries in new ways. Despite her tragically early death in March of 2016, the projects now being completed by her office without their original lead designer continue to push boundaries both creative and technological, while the fearless media presence she cultivated in recent decades has cemented her place in society as a woman who needs just one name: Zaha.

Spotlight: Zaha Hadid - More Images+ 31

Spotlight: Richard Meier

"When I am asked what I believe in, I say that I believe in architecture. Architecture is the mother of the arts. I like to believe that architecture connects the present with the past and the tangible with the intangible."

Richard Meier, the Pritzker Prize and AIA Gold Medal-winning architect, is well known for his abstracted, often white, buildings and unrelenting personal design philosophy. Citing Bernini and Borromini as influences as well as Le Corbusier and Louis Kahn, Meier received his Bachelor in Architecture from Cornell University in 1957 and took jobs with Skidmore Owings & Merrill and Marcel Breuer soon after his graduation. He began his own private practice in New York in 1963 and rocketed to architectural fame in the early 1970s, after being named as one of the "New York Five."

Spotlight: Richard Meier - More Images+ 26

Train Stations: Examples of Floor Plans and Sections

Train Stations: Examples of Floor Plans and Sections - More Images+ 26

Train stations are usually complex programs since they must not only solve the departure and arrival of trains but also respond to the circulation of its users, provide certain services and be a connecting space between the transport systems of a city. Architects from different parts of the world have developed different solutions to this program. Below you can find 10 examples of train stations, their floor plans and sections.

Royal Birmingham Conservatoire / Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios

Royal Birmingham Conservatoire / Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios - More Images+ 14

Napoli Afragola Station / Zaha Hadid Architects

Napoli Afragola Station / Zaha Hadid Architects - More Images+ 41

Casoria, Italy

New Library at the University of Bedfordshire / MCW Architects

New Library at the University of Bedfordshire / MCW Architects - More Images+ 33

Spotlight: Daniel Libeskind

Spotlight: Daniel Libeskind - Image 1 of 4
Denver Art Museum. Image © Bitter Brecht

In the architecture world, few designers can claim to have a more clearly-defined style than Daniel Libeskind (born May 12, 1946). Much of Libeskind's work is instantly recognizable for its angular forms, intersecting planes, and frequent use of diagonally-sliced windows, a style that he has used to great effect in museums and memorials—but which he has equally adapted to conference centers, skyscrapers, and shopping malls.

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Daniel Libeskind On the Poetics of Memory and Time in Architecture

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In PLANE-SITE's latest video from their Time-Space-Existence series, Daniel Libeskind describes his work in relation to Shakespeare's quote that "time is out of joint." Weaving in his philosophy regarding time, memory and architecture, Libeskind discusses his seminal works such as the Jewish Museum Berlin and the Ground Zero master plan. These ideas will be transferred to his new project named Facing Gaia, an architectural sculpture to be located in Giardini Marinaressa, which explores the connections between climate, time, space and existence.

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520 West 28th / Zaha Hadid Architects

520 West 28th / Zaha Hadid Architects - More Images+ 40

Sportcampus Zuiderpark / FaulknerBrowns Architects

Sportcampus Zuiderpark / FaulknerBrowns Architects - More Images+ 16

The 50 Most Popular Architecture Photographs of 2017

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At ArchDaily, we're lucky enough to know a fantastic network of architecture professionals, allowing us to share the world's best architecture with our audience. But our articles wouldn't be the same without the many photographers who dedicate themselves to making incredible, inspiring images. For that reason, here we present the 50 most popular architecture images of 2017.

The Results Are In: 2017 Was Another Record-Breaking Year for Skyscrapers

The Results Are In: 2017 Was Another Record-Breaking Year for Skyscrapers - Image 1 of 4
Tallest 20 skyline. Image Courtesy of CTBUH

2017 was another banner year for skyscraper construction.

According to the 2017 Tall Building Year in Review, the annual web report from The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH), a record-breaking 144 buildings 200 meters tall (656 feet tall) or higher were completed in 2017, led by the 599-meter-tall Ping An Finance Center and 555-meter-tall Lotte World Tower.

In the report, CTBUH outlines this year’s trends in tall building design. Notably, 2017 proved to be the most geographically diverse year in history for tall buildings, with 69 cities across 23 countries completing new towers, an significant increase from 54 cities and 18 countries in 2016. Of those numbers, 28 cities and 8 countries completed their new tallest building.

The Results Are In: 2017 Was Another Record-Breaking Year for Skyscrapers - More Images+ 22

CityLife Shopping District / Zaha Hadid Architects

CityLife Shopping District / Zaha Hadid Architects - More Images+ 9

Chaoyang Park Plaza / MAD Architects

Chaoyang Park Plaza / MAD Architects - Commercial Architecture
© Hufton+Crow

Chaoyang Park Plaza / MAD Architects - More Images+ 25

Canaletto Residential Tower / UNStudio

Canaletto Residential Tower / UNStudio - More Images+ 14

Cittadella Bridge / Richard Meier & Partners

Cittadella Bridge / Richard Meier & Partners - Bridges
© Hufton+Crow

Cittadella Bridge / Richard Meier & Partners - More Images+ 16

Alessandria, Italy
  • Architects: Richard Meier & Partners
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Italcementi