1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture

Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

How Internet Connectivity Impacts Urban Inequity

If you’re reading this right now, or have read an article on ArchDaily, it’s because you were in a place that enabled you to connect to the internet. Think about a time when you found yourself in a dead zone, where the internet was lagging and you were unable to connect your computer to WiFi to finish an assignment or even without the ability to connect your phone to quickly Google something. You likely dashed to the nearest coffee shop, or place where WiFi was more reliable, just to have the feeling of being online again. The internet, in an ideal world, is equally open to all providing access to knowledge and the ability to easily connect with others. But what happens when you don’t have internet? How is your life impacted if you’re on the wrong side of the digital divide and live in an area without broadband access?

Drozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine

One of the most urgent problems faced by Ukrainians today is the unsettled situation faced by displaced citizens, along with the challenge of returning to the cities they were forced to abandon earlier this year. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has shared that efforts to rebuild Ukraine will require ‘colossal investments’, and as leaders gather to work out ‘Marshall plan’ to rebuild the country, local architects have already begun developing emergency housing, healthcare, and educational facilities in cities further away from the Russian border.

As a temporary solution to the displacement of north-eastern and eastern Ukrainians, Drozdov&Partners, together with Replus Bureau and Ponomarenko Bureau, have begun refurbishing shelters for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Lviv and its region, using school campuses and other large-scale facilities as temporary housing.

Drozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine - Featured ImageDrozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine - Image 1 of 4Drozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine - Image 2 of 4Drozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine - Image 3 of 4Drozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine - More Images

Grimshaw Reveals Design for Futures Institute at Dollar Academy in Scotland, UK

Architecture practice Grimshaw has revealed designs for the Futures Institute at Dollar Academy (FIDA) in Scotland, UK, an open-access learning platform developed by the Dollar Academy, one of Scotland’s leading independent schools. The Institute’s new building will receive the country’s first Living Building certification.

FIDA was launched in May 2021 to tackle fundamental challenges in education: providing equitable access and closing the poverty-related attainment gap; finding compelling alternatives to traditional teaching and exam systems; and addressing sustainability. The initiative invites young people across Scotland to participate in innovative projects rooted in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. These challenges include workshops, skills-based courses, design challenges, and competitions, all offered in-person and via an online platform to enable the broadest possible participation.

Grimshaw Reveals Design for Futures Institute at Dollar Academy in Scotland, UK - Image 1 of 4Grimshaw Reveals Design for Futures Institute at Dollar Academy in Scotland, UK - Image 2 of 4Grimshaw Reveals Design for Futures Institute at Dollar Academy in Scotland, UK - Image 3 of 4Grimshaw Reveals Design for Futures Institute at Dollar Academy in Scotland, UK - Image 4 of 4Grimshaw Reveals Design for Futures Institute at Dollar Academy in Scotland, UK - More Images

Architecture in Japanese Manga: Exploring the World of Jujutsu Kaisen

Subscriber Access | 

Manga is an umbrella term for a wide variety of comic books and graphic novels originally produced and published in Japan, and unlike western comic books that we may be more familiar with seeing printed in full color, are primarily published in black and white. Manga is the Japanese word for comics published in Japan, with the word itself comprising of two kanji characters: man (漫) meaning 'whimsical' and ga (画) meaning 'pictures'.

Not to be confused with the popular Japanese medium of anime, manga is print media whilst anime stands as visual media that is either hand-drawn or computer-produced, combining graphic art, characterization, cinematography, and other forms of creative and individualistic techniques. It is most notable that a lot of anime is developed as a result of a successful franchise that began as mere manga novels, but what continually unites the medium of manga and anime is the use of diverse art styles throughout various narratives that have been constructed for us consumers to follow.

Architecture in Japanese Manga: Exploring the World of Jujutsu Kaisen - Image 1 of 4Architecture in Japanese Manga: Exploring the World of Jujutsu Kaisen - Image 2 of 4Architecture in Japanese Manga: Exploring the World of Jujutsu Kaisen - Image 3 of 4Architecture in Japanese Manga: Exploring the World of Jujutsu Kaisen - Image 4 of 4Architecture in Japanese Manga: Exploring the World of Jujutsu Kaisen - More Images+ 9

An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily

Subscriber Access | 

This week’s curated selection of Best Unbuilt Architecture highlights educational facilities submitted by the ArchDaily community. From a contextual Earth school in Senegal, to a borderless, collaborative school in Vietnam, this round up of unbuilt projects showcases how architects infused nature with architecture, offering students the chance to engage with the landscape and learn more about their surroundings from their academic institutes. The article also features projects from Lebanon, Switzerland, Armenia, Ukraine, and Greece.

An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 9 of 4An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 25 of 4An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 32 of 4An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 52 of 4An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily - More Images+ 65

3XN/GXN and IB Selected to Design a New Ecotope for the EPFL Campus in Switzerland

The EPFL Innovation Park (EIP) has selected 3XN | GXN and IB (Itten+Brechbühl SA) to design and build a new "ecotope", expanding the university's Science Park and Innovation Square to a new site, west of the main EPFL campus in Ecublens, Switzerland. The Ecotope is set to be a vibrant and innovative marketplace for ideas, serving as an "ecosystem in which policymakers, researchers, investors, executives, students, and citizens can come together for open dialogue or debate.” The concept of the project not only brings together leaders in business, science, and technology, but also puts a high priority on access to green spaces and biophilic principles.

3XN/GXN and IB Selected to Design a New Ecotope for the EPFL Campus in Switzerland - Image 1 of 43XN/GXN and IB Selected to Design a New Ecotope for the EPFL Campus in Switzerland - Image 2 of 43XN/GXN and IB Selected to Design a New Ecotope for the EPFL Campus in Switzerland - Image 3 of 43XN/GXN and IB Selected to Design a New Ecotope for the EPFL Campus in Switzerland - Image 4 of 43XN/GXN and IB Selected to Design a New Ecotope for the EPFL Campus in Switzerland - More Images+ 4

Federico Fiorino’s Ethereal Design Wins Competition for the Floating Pavilion on the Drava River in Maribor, Slovenia

The Outsider magazine and the City Municipality of Maribor have announced the winners of the international competition “Floating Pavilion on the Drava River.” The purpose of the competition was to obtain an innovative design for a floating pavilion that would have two main functions: a space for smaller events during the Lent Festival and a space for contemplation by the river. The City Municipality of Maribor will invite the winning candidate to participate in the implementation of the project.

Federico Fiorino’s Ethereal Design Wins Competition for the Floating Pavilion on the Drava River in Maribor, Slovenia - Image 1 of 4Federico Fiorino’s Ethereal Design Wins Competition for the Floating Pavilion on the Drava River in Maribor, Slovenia - Image 2 of 4Federico Fiorino’s Ethereal Design Wins Competition for the Floating Pavilion on the Drava River in Maribor, Slovenia - Image 3 of 4Federico Fiorino’s Ethereal Design Wins Competition for the Floating Pavilion on the Drava River in Maribor, Slovenia - Image 4 of 4Federico Fiorino’s Ethereal Design Wins Competition for the Floating Pavilion on the Drava River in Maribor, Slovenia - More Images+ 7

Graphic Design and Architecture: A Collaborative Way

Subscriber Access | 

Clearly, graphic designers are not architects, but collaborative projects between these two fields of knowledge, which intersect in their details, can work well.

Creative industry as a sector has evolved, and many people are now in new fields. If you're collaborating, you can move quickly and we've covered that here. The trend is to be collaborative, and very different from 25 years ago, when you should be a graphic designer alone doing layout and paper weights or an architect isolated in an office running autocad.

Graphic Design and Architecture: A Collaborative Way - Image 1 of 4Graphic Design and Architecture: A Collaborative Way - Image 2 of 4Graphic Design and Architecture: A Collaborative Way - Image 3 of 4Graphic Design and Architecture: A Collaborative Way - Image 4 of 4Graphic Design and Architecture: A Collaborative Way - More Images

An Architectural Journey Through the Woods

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

There are extraordinary connections between the natural world and the capacity for creativity in human beings. In his book Last Child in the Woods, journalist and author Richard Louv observes: “Nature inspires creativity in a child by demanding visualization and the full use of the senses. Given a chance, a child will bring the confusion of the world to the woods, wash it in a creek, turn it over to see what lives on the unseen side of that confusion.” He concludes that in nature, “a child finds freedom, fantasy, and privacy: a place distant from the adult world, a separate peace.” The architect Frank Harmon likewise wrote touchingly about the outdoors, woods, and water as perfect settings for cultivating a thirst for learning and discovery: “Children raised by creeks are never bored. Creek children don’t know about learning by rote, neither are they conditioned to working nine to five. Berries are their first discoveries, and birds’ nests, and watching the stars come out. Later they discover books. To creek children, learning is discovery, not instruction.”

Toronto Plans on Stopping the Construction of Smart Cities Following Concerns of Privacy

As more smart cities make their way across the globe, whether it being in countries of the Far East, Latin America, or the Middle East, Toronto is stepping back from the smart city bandwagon, and reassessing its substantial contribution to the community. The Canadian city, which ranked 15th on Global Finance's ranking of the world's best cities to live in for the year 2022, plans on "killing the smart city forever", especially after Quayside's controversial cancellation reasons, questioning its lack of privacy, necessity on an urban scale, and whether people truly want to live in a tech-driven environment.

Toronto Plans on Stopping the Construction of Smart Cities Following Concerns of Privacy  - Image 1 of 4Toronto Plans on Stopping the Construction of Smart Cities Following Concerns of Privacy  - Image 2 of 4Toronto Plans on Stopping the Construction of Smart Cities Following Concerns of Privacy  - Image 3 of 4Toronto Plans on Stopping the Construction of Smart Cities Following Concerns of Privacy  - Image 4 of 4Toronto Plans on Stopping the Construction of Smart Cities Following Concerns of Privacy  - More Images

Passages Insolites, the Public Art Circuit Explores Unexpected Public Spaces in the City of Québec

Initiated by EXMURO arts publics and the Ville de Québec, the 9th edition of Passages Insolites, or Unusual Passages, is open from June 25 to October 10, 2022, in the city of Québec. During this time, 17 works by 18 local, Canadian, and international artists will be placed along a 2.5 km circuit in the historic sectors of Place Royale, Petit Champlain, and the Old Port. This year’s edition creates spaces for artistic encounters and reflection on the environment, decolonization, and geopolitics. In the words of Vincent Roy, EXMURO’s executive and artistic director, this year’s programming will “help put Quebec City on the global art map as a venue for exhibiting art and promoting artists, both locally and internationally.”

Passages Insolites, the Public Art Circuit Explores Unexpected Public Spaces in the City of Québec - Image 1 of 4Passages Insolites, the Public Art Circuit Explores Unexpected Public Spaces in the City of Québec - Image 2 of 4Passages Insolites, the Public Art Circuit Explores Unexpected Public Spaces in the City of Québec - Image 3 of 4Passages Insolites, the Public Art Circuit Explores Unexpected Public Spaces in the City of Québec - Image 4 of 4Passages Insolites, the Public Art Circuit Explores Unexpected Public Spaces in the City of Québec - More Images+ 5

How Does Global Inflation Impact the Design Profession?

Architecture, as a profession, is highly cyclical in nature. It ebbs and flows with the tides of economic conditions, and is especially hard hit during times of downturn. We’ve all heard stories or experienced it ourselves, or layoffs during the Great Financial Crisis in 2008, or even more recently the significant cutbacks architecture firms went through during the uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic. Projects went on hold and new business opportunities declined almost overnight. Now, two years later, firms are keeping a close watch on global supply chain issues and rising inflation rates, especially with increased pressure to meet the needs of a growing urban population. Will architecture be recession-proof as we enter a bear market? 

Steven Holl’s Architectural Archive Preserves His Firm’s Designs and the Landscape

Steven Holl can often be found reading poetry and painting watercolors in a tiny cabin overlooking lotus flowers on the edge of a lake in Rhinebeck, New York. The cabin sits on a 28-acre reserve that Holl purchased in 2014 that now hosts Holl’s full-time office, and ‘T’ Space, a nonprofit arts organization offering creative exhibitions, environmental installations, and architectural residencies. Wrapping around several large trees and linking through a passageway to another existing 1959 cabin, the Steven Myron Holl Foundation’s Architectural Archive and Research Library, built in 2019, is the latest building to be carefully situated in the lush landscape.

Steven Holl’s Architectural Archive Preserves His Firm’s Designs and the Landscape - Image 1 of 4Steven Holl’s Architectural Archive Preserves His Firm’s Designs and the Landscape - Image 2 of 4Steven Holl’s Architectural Archive Preserves His Firm’s Designs and the Landscape - Image 3 of 4Steven Holl’s Architectural Archive Preserves His Firm’s Designs and the Landscape - Image 4 of 4Steven Holl’s Architectural Archive Preserves His Firm’s Designs and the Landscape - More Images+ 6

In alliance with Architonic
Check the latest In ArchitectureCheck the latest In ArchitectureCheck the latest In Architecture

Check the latest In Architecture