Hufton+Crow

Hufton+Crow are dedicated to creating inspiring and striking photographs of contemporary interior and exterior architecture around the world. As two experienced photographers with complementary skills and competitive characters they offer a unique service because they work as a team – either both simultaneously photographing one project, or by each providing input, critiques and direction of the others work. The outcome is a passionate attention to detail, the most creative approach possible and a reliable and professional service. Above all, it results in beautiful photographs that show buildings at their best – images that describe architecture within the built environment. Hufton+Crow strive to create strong and lasting professional relationships, by listening and attending to their clients’ objectives first. The breadth of their client base and the longevity of these relationships proves the efficacy of this approach. They shoot digitally, believing that it is the format that can provide the most benefit to the client. They also provide professional re-touching and post-production as part of the service.

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6 Buildings Shortlisted for the Inaugural RIBA International Prize

The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has announced the shortlist of six finalist projects in the running for the inaugural RIBA International Prize. The first RIBA Award open to any qualified architect in the world, the International Prize seeks to name the world’s “most significant and inspirational” building. Criteria for consideration include the demonstration of “visionary, innovative thinking and excellence of execution, whilst making a distinct contribution to its users and to its physical context.”

The six finalists were named from a longlist of 30 buildings, from which a further selection of 21 projects have been recognized by the jury for the RIBA Award for International Excellence. The jury has also named the winner of the RIBA International Emerging Architect prize recognizing “the achievement of architects in the earlier stages of their career who are working on global projects.”

The Grand Jury is lead by Richard Rogers and includes Billie Tsien, Kunlé Adeyemi, Philip Gumuchdjian, and Marilyn Jordan Taylor.

"Our panel of jurors have been particularly impressed by the way in which each building reacts to, resolves and assimilates into the varying geographies and contexts - from dense urban cities to a small town in the Arctic Circle," said RIBA President Jane Duncan on the naming of the finalists. "Each project resolves the complex demands of its context with ingenuity, exceptional detail and finishing and a sensitivity to the needs of the users and communities which will inhabit these spaces."

Alphabeta / Studio RHE

Alphabeta / Studio RHE - Institutional Buildings, Facade, Beam
© Hufton + Crow

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Veiled in Brilliance: How Reflective Facades Have Changed Modern Architecture

Even as modernism promoted the transparency of glass architecture, many within the movement were conscious of the monotony of large glass facades, with even Mies van der Rohe using elements such as his trademark mullions to break up his facades. But in the years since, countless uniform structural glazing skyscrapers have emerged and bored urban citizens. In response to this, unconventional reinterpretations of facades have gained interest.

Accompanied by the belief that light and brilliance could help in creating iconic architecture and a better human world, glass and metal have been innovatively transformed to create crystalline images. As a result, the locus of meaning in architecture has shifted from the internal space-form towards the external surface.

MAAT / AL_A

MAAT / AL_A - Museum, CoastMAAT / AL_A - MuseumMAAT / AL_A - MuseumMAAT / AL_A - Museum, FacadeMAAT / AL_A - More Images+ 28

Lisboa, Portugal
  • Architects: AL_A
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  panoramah!®, Ceràmica Cumella
  • Professionals: AFACONSULT, Disset

Antwerp Port House / Zaha Hadid Architects

Antwerp Port House / Zaha Hadid Architects - RefurbishmentAntwerp Port House / Zaha Hadid Architects - RefurbishmentAntwerp Port House / Zaha Hadid Architects - RefurbishmentAntwerp Port House / Zaha Hadid Architects - RefurbishmentAntwerp Port House / Zaha Hadid Architects - More Images+ 36

Herzog & de Meuron, OMA, MAD Among 13 Shortlisted for “Design of the Year 2016”

The Design Museum in London has announced the shortlist of 13 architecture projects being considered for the 2016 edition of the prestigious Beazley Design of the Year award. From Tatiana Bilbao’s Sustainable Housing Prototype to MAD Architects’ Harbin Opera House, the list features projects from a wide variety of scales and programs, celebrating some of architecture’s most significant achievements from the past year.

The award, now in its ninth year, “celebrates design that promotes or delivers change, enables access, extends design practice or captures the spirit of the year.” Nominees are selected in six categories, including Architecture, Digital, Fashion, Graphics, Product and Transport. An exhibition on the projects will be on display from 24 November 2016 – 19 February 2017.

Last year, the overall architecture prize was awarded to Alejandro Aravena's UC Innovation Center for the building’s ability to be “permeable – visually, socially and climatically with its environment."

View all of the shortlisted buildings, after the break.

Gallery: Calatrava's WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow

Hufton+Crow have shared with us their latest set of photographs: Santiago Calatrava’s World Trade Center Transportation Hub in New York City. Hardly requiring an introduction, the spiky structure has opened in stages since last year to mixed critical response, with new retail spaces lining the central “Oculus” space debuting to the public earlier this month.

Continue on for the British duo’s photographic impressions of the ribbed structure.

Gallery: Calatrava's WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow - Image 1 of 4Gallery: Calatrava's WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow - Image 2 of 4Gallery: Calatrava's WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow - Image 3 of 4Gallery: Calatrava's WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow - Image 4 of 4Gallery: Calatrava's WTC Transportation Hub Photographed by Hufton+Crow - More Images+ 51

York Theatre Royal / De Matos Ryan

York Theatre Royal  / De Matos Ryan - RefurbishmentYork Theatre Royal  / De Matos Ryan - RefurbishmentYork Theatre Royal  / De Matos Ryan - RefurbishmentYork Theatre Royal  / De Matos Ryan - RefurbishmentYork Theatre Royal  / De Matos Ryan - More Images+ 10

Siemens Headquarters / Henning Larsen

RIBA Announces 46 Winners for 2016 National Awards

The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has announced the winners of the 2016 RIBA National Awards. The shortlist for the RIBA Stirling Prize for the UK’s best building of the year will be drawn from these 46 award-winning buildings.

OMA Partner Reinier de Graaf on the Social Dimension of Luxury Housing at Holland Green

This week, OMA has unveiled their latest project in London, Holland Green. Working alongside Allies & Morrison, the firm has created three new luxury residential buildings on a site of significant cultural importance: the former home of the Commonwealth Institute, designed by Sir Robert Matthew, one of the founding partners of RMJM. As a result, OMA and Allies & Morrison’s Holland Green project involved much more than just adding fuel to the fire of London’s booming luxury residential market—it also involved an extensive conversion to the original 1962 Commonwealth Institute exhibition hall, funded through the scheme’s profitable residential offering, to prepare the heritage building for its new tenants the Design Museum.

ArchDaily spoke with Reinier de Graaf, the partner in charge of the project at OMA, to discuss the development’s social aspirations, the challenges of the London context, and the story behind the project.

OMA Partner Reinier de Graaf on the Social Dimension of Luxury Housing at Holland Green - Image 1 of 4OMA Partner Reinier de Graaf on the Social Dimension of Luxury Housing at Holland Green - Image 2 of 4OMA Partner Reinier de Graaf on the Social Dimension of Luxury Housing at Holland Green - Image 3 of 4OMA Partner Reinier de Graaf on the Social Dimension of Luxury Housing at Holland Green - Image 4 of 4OMA Partner Reinier de Graaf on the Social Dimension of Luxury Housing at Holland Green - More Images+ 7

Holland Green / OMA + Allies & Morrison

Holland Green / OMA + Allies & Morrison - Housing, FacadeHolland Green / OMA + Allies & Morrison - Housing, FacadeHolland Green / OMA + Allies & Morrison - Housing, FacadeHolland Green / OMA + Allies & Morrison - Housing, FacadeHolland Green / OMA + Allies & Morrison - More Images+ 26

Salerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects

Salerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects - Port
©  Helene Binet
Salerno, Italy

Salerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects - Port, FacadeSalerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects - Port, BeamSalerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects - Port, StairsSalerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects - PortSalerno Maritime Terminal / Zaha Hadid Architects - More Images+ 20

JTI Headquarters / SOM

JTI Headquarters / SOM - Institutional Buildings, FacadeJTI Headquarters / SOM - Institutional Buildings, Beam, Facade, Table, ChairJTI Headquarters / SOM - Institutional Buildings, FacadeJTI Headquarters / SOM - Institutional Buildings, CityscapeJTI Headquarters / SOM - More Images+ 24

World Trade Center Transportation Hub / Santiago Calatrava

World Trade Center Transportation Hub  / Santiago Calatrava -           Transportation HubWorld Trade Center Transportation Hub  / Santiago Calatrava -           Transportation Hub, Facade, ArchWorld Trade Center Transportation Hub  / Santiago Calatrava -           Transportation Hub, Facade, CityscapeWorld Trade Center Transportation Hub  / Santiago Calatrava -           Transportation Hub, Facade, ArchWorld Trade Center Transportation Hub  / Santiago Calatrava - More Images+ 52

Yalding House / BuckleyGrayYeoman

Yalding House  / BuckleyGrayYeoman - Refurbishment, Facade, Column, Arch, Handrail, LightingYalding House  / BuckleyGrayYeoman - RefurbishmentYalding House  / BuckleyGrayYeoman - Refurbishment, Stairs, Door, Handrail, FacadeYalding House  / BuckleyGrayYeoman - Refurbishment, Door, Facade, ChairYalding House  / BuckleyGrayYeoman - More Images+ 21

The 14 Stories Behind the 2016 Building of the Year Award Winners

Last week, ArchDaily unveiled the 14 winners of this year’s Building of the Year award. Selected by ArchDaily readers from a pool of over 3,000 candidates, these 14 projects represent the best designs published by ArchDaily in the past year, as determined by an unbiased network of 55,000 voters who took part - each of them a judge in one of the world's most democratic architecture awards.

Representing a diverse field of architects, locations and project types, each design has a very different story about how it came into being, how its design responds to its context, how it fits into an architect's oeuvre, or what it says about the direction which architecture is traveling in. But despite the many different types of story represented, each of the stories behind the Building of the Year winners is a fascinating architectural tale. Here are those 14 stories.

AD Readers Debate: #YoIsMore, NCARB Scraps "Intern," and More

In the past two weeks, the topics of discussion in the ArchDaily comments section have been incredibly diverse: from a debate over a light-hearted approach to getting the architectural job of your dreams, to a serious argument over the exploitation of young workers in the industry; and from criticism of a Zaha-like “melted yellow cheese” design to a favorable analysis of an intellectual postmodernist landmark. Read on to find out what our readers had to say.