1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture

Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

MVRDV Reveals Design of Residential Towers in Puerto Santa Ana, Ecuador

MVRDV has revealed the design for its first project in South America. The Hills is a residential project located on the Guayas riverfront in Guayaquil, Ecuador, comprised of six residential towers displayed atop a mixed-use plinth, creating the image of a valley. The towers range in height from 92 to 143 meters, raising taller the further away they are from the riverfront. The whole composition is inspired by the local landscape that merges the natural and the urban environment.

MVRDV Reveals Design of Residential Towers in Puerto Santa Ana, Ecuador - Image 1 of 4MVRDV Reveals Design of Residential Towers in Puerto Santa Ana, Ecuador - Image 2 of 4MVRDV Reveals Design of Residential Towers in Puerto Santa Ana, Ecuador - Image 3 of 4MVRDV Reveals Design of Residential Towers in Puerto Santa Ana, Ecuador - Image 4 of 4MVRDV Reveals Design of Residential Towers in Puerto Santa Ana, Ecuador - More Images+ 8

What Are the Smart Materials in Architecture?

Subscriber Access | 

Smart buildings are more and more on the agenda. For their elaboration, some materials have been developed to meet specific objectives during their use without the need to be operated by any person or equipment. Self-maintenance, cleaning the air, working with the comfort of space, energy efficiency, are just some of the benefits that can be achieved by adopting them.

What Are the Smart Materials in Architecture? - Image 1 of 4What Are the Smart Materials in Architecture? - Image 2 of 4What Are the Smart Materials in Architecture? - Image 3 of 4What Are the Smart Materials in Architecture? - Image 4 of 4What Are the Smart Materials in Architecture? - More Images+ 1

A Brief History of the Vienna Secession Design Movement

Subscriber Access | 

All architecture movements throughout history spur from shifts in society that demand a new style that better reflects the way that technology has advanced the practice and how people express their political, religious, and moral beliefs and practices. While some shifts occur over a period of several years, others are experienced as a sudden revolt. The Vienna Secession was undoubtedly the latter. At the end of the 19th century, a group of artists and architects aimed to explore what art should be as it pertained to filtering global influences in a way that could introduce new modernism.

ZHA Inaugurates Design Museum in Seoul with Meta-Technology Exhibition

Dongdaemun Design Plaza (DDP) has collaborated with Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) for the 'Meta-Horizons: The Future Now' exhibition in Seoul, Korea. Designed by ZHA to promote the instigation and exchange of new ideas and to showcase innovative technologies and media, the inaugural exhibition of DDP’s new Design Museum explores ZHA’s work across multiple fields, from digital technology to artificial intelligence and virtual reality, featuring the firm's recent designs, process, and research that incorporates immersive technologies and new fabrication techniques. The exhibition will be on display from 26 May - 18 September 2022.

ZHA Inaugurates Design Museum in Seoul with Meta-Technology Exhibition - Image 1 of 4ZHA Inaugurates Design Museum in Seoul with Meta-Technology Exhibition - Image 2 of 4ZHA Inaugurates Design Museum in Seoul with Meta-Technology Exhibition - Image 3 of 4ZHA Inaugurates Design Museum in Seoul with Meta-Technology Exhibition - Image 4 of 4ZHA Inaugurates Design Museum in Seoul with Meta-Technology Exhibition - More Images+ 10

Powerhouse Company Reveals IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam

Powerhouse Company has revealed the design of the new IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam, Netherlands. The architects drew inspiration from the client’s ethos to create a building that functions as a vertical city, with a large atrium conceived as the central social space and multi-tenant offices as neighborhood units. The 35,000 square meter building will house startups and scaleups in addition to the various amenities like fitness areas, restaurants, and lecture halls.

Powerhouse Company Reveals IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam - Image 1 of 4Powerhouse Company Reveals IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam - Image 2 of 4Powerhouse Company Reveals IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam - Image 3 of 4Powerhouse Company Reveals IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam - Image 4 of 4Powerhouse Company Reveals IBM Headquarters in Amsterdam - More Images+ 1

Interior Design: 34 Kitchens in Mexico Exploring Different Spatial Layouts

Subscriber Access | 

Over the years, interior design has evolved according to the needs that arise, but above all, according to the experiences it seeks to evoke in the user. Over the last two years, we have witnessed a radical change and a special interest in this subject because the pandemic forced us to pay specific attention to the configuration of the places we inhabit. This brought about much more holistic designs that seek to address the wellbeing of the user, combining colours, sensory experiences, technology and natural elements that promote health.

Interior Design: 34 Kitchens in Mexico Exploring Different Spatial Layouts - Image 1 of 4Interior Design: 34 Kitchens in Mexico Exploring Different Spatial Layouts - Image 2 of 4Interior Design: 34 Kitchens in Mexico Exploring Different Spatial Layouts - Image 3 of 4Interior Design: 34 Kitchens in Mexico Exploring Different Spatial Layouts - Image 4 of 4Interior Design: 34 Kitchens in Mexico Exploring Different Spatial Layouts - More Images+ 30

A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily

Subscriber Access | 
A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily - Featured Image
Tiny Home by Ev Design Office. Image Courtesy of Parisa Azizi

This week’s curated selection of Best Unbuilt Architecture highlights residential projects submitted by the ArchDaily community. From a small community-dwelling in Ghana to a villa tucked under a hillside in Portugal, this roundup of unbuilt projects explores how architects react to various site topographies, cultures, and material availability when designing spaces that provide more than shelter to their users. The article also includes projects from India, Iran, Ireland, Latvia, Georgia, and Saudi Arabia.

A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 29 of 4A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 33 of 4A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 42 of 4A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily - Image 49 of 4A Recyclable and Modular Housing Complex in India and A Secluded Cliff House in Iran: 8 Unbuilt Residential Projects Submitted to ArchDaily - More Images+ 45

MVRDV's Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has Opened to the Public

Designed by Rotterdam Rooftop Days and MVRDV, the Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has finally opened to the public. The installation offers visitors a new perspective on the city, with a 30-meter-high aerial bridge that spans across a variety of the city’s rooftops, from the roof of The Bijenkorf department store to the top of the World Trade Centre plinth. The project aims to showcase how rooftops can provide an added layer of public infrastructure in a dense city where public space is scarce. Rotterdam Rooftop Walk is open from May 26 to June 24 from 10:00 to 20:00.

MVRDV's Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has Opened to the Public - Image 1 of 4MVRDV's Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has Opened to the Public - Image 2 of 4MVRDV's Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has Opened to the Public - Image 3 of 4MVRDV's Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has Opened to the Public - Image 4 of 4MVRDV's Rotterdam Rooftop Walk has Opened to the Public - More Images+ 14

Graham Foundation Announces the Names of 2022 Individual Grant Recipients

The Graham Foundation has announced the award of 56 new grants to individuals exploring ideas that expand contemporary understandings of architecture. The recipients have been selected from an open call that resulted in nearly 500 submissions. The selected projects are led by 81 individuals with diverse backgrounds. The funded projects, including exhibitions, publications, films, and podcasts, among other formats, encourage experimentation and foster critical discourse in architecture.

Graham Foundation Announces the Names of 2022 Individual Grant Recipients - Image 1 of 4Graham Foundation Announces the Names of 2022 Individual Grant Recipients - Image 2 of 4Graham Foundation Announces the Names of 2022 Individual Grant Recipients - Image 3 of 4Graham Foundation Announces the Names of 2022 Individual Grant Recipients - Image 4 of 4Graham Foundation Announces the Names of 2022 Individual Grant Recipients - More Images

Eva Franch I Gilabert: “We Need to Produce New Models With New Values”

Subscriber Access | 

Eva Franch I. Gilabert is one of the three artistic directors of Model. Barcelona Architectures Festival, together with Beth Galí I. Camprubí and José Luis de Vicente. The first edition of a project that has taken the city of Barcelona as a place for experimentation and debate.

From the 5th to the 15th of May, they took the public space and transformed it into both a playground and platform for international voices, local architects, policymakers, politicians and citizens, to engage and discuss what the future of Barcelona and other cities could be.

Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman

Subscriber Access | 
Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman - Featured Image
© Kaoru Yamada

"Growing up queer means experiencing the destabilizing absence of a broad and accessible queer history, most notably, in our case, in relation to spatial design". This account is what intrigued artist Adam Nathaniel Furman and architectural historian Joshua Mardell to bring together a community of contributors who bring new perspectives to the field of architecture and share stories of spaces that challenge cis-heteronormative morals, sheltering lives that seek to live their own truths. The result of this quest is a book titled Queer Spaces: An Atlas of LGBTQIA+ Places and Stories, which explores stories about distinct social, political, and geographical contexts within the community.

Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman - Image 1 of 4Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman - Image 2 of 4Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman - Image 3 of 4Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman - Image 4 of 4Queer Spaces and the Path of Positive Possibilities Within Architecture: an Interview with Adam Nathaniel Furman - More Images+ 16

Is It Time For Architects to Unionize?

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

Unions are a trend among college-educated young people, the New York Times reports. They seek solidarity—collective leverage—to bring about desired changes that are being resisted. While Amazon and Starbucks get the headlines, younger architects are also organizing. Doing so is urged on by The Architecture Lobby, a group that leans Democratic Socialist. The Manhattan-based firm SHoP was a recent, ultimately unsuccessful target of a group of its employees and a sponsoring trade union.

Is It Time For Architects to Unionize? - Image 1 of 4Is It Time For Architects to Unionize? - Image 2 of 4Is It Time For Architects to Unionize? - Image 3 of 4Is It Time For Architects to Unionize? - Image 4 of 4Is It Time For Architects to Unionize? - More Images+ 1

Innovative Ceramic Surfaces for a Healthy Return to Movie Theaters

 | Sponsored Content

In the context of the pandemic, where several businesses were forced to close temporarily, movie theaters across the world were among the most affected. Fast forward more than two years later, and the lingering effects of COVID-19 are still present, marking a turning point in the traditional cinema experience. But even as attendance is still not close to pre-pandemic levels, certain segments of moviegoers are enjoying the benefits of the giant screen, comfortable seats, massive speaker systems and theater snacks.

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

Check the latest In Architecture