1. ArchDaily
  2. Contemporary Architecture

Contemporary Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

Next-Gen Living: Customizable, High-Quality Bathroom Design Within Reach

 | Sponsored Content

Every detail in the construction of an environment has a significant impact. The layout, composition, furniture, color range, and materials work together to create a cohesive and immersive experience in the perception of space. In bathroom design, this integration extends beyond aesthetics, aiming to ensure that every choice— from materiality to the form of furniture— contributes to economically viable, functional spaces with an aesthetic that doesn't rely on exclusivity. Architects and designers can shape diverse settings without sacrificing quality or visual coherence by focusing on cost-effectiveness and well-resolved solutions. In this sense, a democratic approach to design becomes a tool for creating environments where quality, functionality, and affordability are core principles.

Navigating Milan Design Week 2025: Key Venues, Events and Architectural Installations to Experience

Subscriber Access | 

Milan Design Week 2025 is one of the most significant events in the design world, taking place from April 8 to April 13. Following in the previous years' tradition, the city of Milano will host a variety of exhibitions, installations, and discussions throughout its diverse districts, each offering a unique atmosphere and thematic focus. Alongside the renowned Salone del Mobile 2025 at the expansive Rho Fiera exhibition grounds, numerous activities and initiatives will be featured, all coordinated under the Fuorisalone agenda. This article will help navigate the many events by highlighting key venues and installations, ranging from the major fair to vibrant design districts and distinctive locations, such as historic courtyards and revitalized industrial spaces.

Navigating Milan Design Week 2025: Key Venues, Events and Architectural Installations to Experience - Image 1 of 4Navigating Milan Design Week 2025: Key Venues, Events and Architectural Installations to Experience - Image 2 of 4Navigating Milan Design Week 2025: Key Venues, Events and Architectural Installations to Experience - Image 3 of 4Navigating Milan Design Week 2025: Key Venues, Events and Architectural Installations to Experience - Image 4 of 4Navigating Milan Design Week 2025: Key Venues, Events and Architectural Installations to Experience - More Images+ 26

"A Building Can Happen Intuitively After the Drawing Has Emerged:" Steven Holl On His Watercolors Exhibition in Berlin

"Steven Holl – Drawing as Thought," an extensive exhibition of the American architect's original watercolors, is now on view at the Tchoban Foundation Museum for Architectural Drawing in Berlin. It reveals insights behind some of Holl's key projects and design methodology. The selected drawings range from early unbuilt winning competition entries to some of the latest visions now under construction in Europe and the United States. Occupying the museum's two levels, the show opened on February 6 with a conversation between Holl and the museum's founder and architect Sergei Tchoban, as well as addresses by Kristin Feireiss, the exhibition's curator and founding director of the next-door Aedes Architecture Forum, and Diana Carta, an architect and scholar from Rome. The show, which can be visited until May 4th, is accompanied by a catalog that states, "The work of internationally renowned US architect Steven Holl is distinguished not only by his extraordinary buildings, with a focus on cultural and public structures such as museums, art centers, concert halls, libraries and universities worldwide, but also by his artistic oeuvre, which today comprises more than 50,000 sketches, black-and-white drawings, and watercolors. […] While exhibition visitors will only encounter a small portion of his extensive body of work, each drawing should be explored and studied individually, in keeping with Holl's intent."

"A Building Can Happen Intuitively After the Drawing Has Emerged:" Steven Holl On His Watercolors Exhibition in Berlin - Image 1 of 4"A Building Can Happen Intuitively After the Drawing Has Emerged:" Steven Holl On His Watercolors Exhibition in Berlin - Image 2 of 4"A Building Can Happen Intuitively After the Drawing Has Emerged:" Steven Holl On His Watercolors Exhibition in Berlin - Image 3 of 4"A Building Can Happen Intuitively After the Drawing Has Emerged:" Steven Holl On His Watercolors Exhibition in Berlin - Image 4 of 4A Building Can Happen Intuitively After the Drawing Has Emerged: Steven Holl On His Watercolors Exhibition in Berlin - More Images+ 23

Beyond Form: How Light and Shadow Define Architectural Atmosphere

Architecture is often defined by its physical form, materials, and structural elements, but light and shadow truly shape the experience of space. These elements influence perception, guide movement, and evoke emotional responses, transforming static structures into dynamic environments. Throughout history, architects have harnessed the interplay of light and shadow, using it as a fundamental design tool to create atmosphere and meaning.

Beyond Form: How Light and Shadow Define Architectural Atmosphere - Imagen 1 de 4Beyond Form: How Light and Shadow Define Architectural Atmosphere - Imagen 2 de 4Beyond Form: How Light and Shadow Define Architectural Atmosphere - Imagen 3 de 4Beyond Form: How Light and Shadow Define Architectural Atmosphere - Imagen 4 de 4Beyond Form: How Light and Shadow Define Architectural Atmosphere - More Images+ 48

"We Were Always Critiquing, We Were Always Throwing Grenades at Things:" In Conversation with Elizabeth Diller

I love putting together lists of original manifesto-like statements by architects perpetually searching for breaking new ground. They provoke us to imagine possibilities we haven't dared to consider before. Questioning conventions should be a critic's primary objective to engage in a conversation with a creative. Otherwise, what is there to discuss, really? That's why speaking with Elizabeth Diller about her studio's work and intentions is like a breath of fresh air, especially nowadays when so many architects are happy to align themselves in pursuing what's expected. In one of our previous conversations, Diller put it bluntly: "We don't take professional boundaries seriously. Every time we are handed a program, we tear it apart and continuously ask new questions. Nothing is fixed." This time, we spoke about Diller Scofidio + Renfro's new monograph, "Architecture, Not Architecture." The book, a project in itself, aims to rethink the very limits of architecture. It reinvents what a book can be in the process. During our 1-1/2-hour discussion over Zoom, which I prefer for its frontal dual recording, she said eagerly, "We were always critiquing; we were always throwing grenades at things."

"We Were Always Critiquing, We Were Always Throwing Grenades at Things:" In Conversation with Elizabeth Diller - Image 1 of 4"We Were Always Critiquing, We Were Always Throwing Grenades at Things:" In Conversation with Elizabeth Diller - Image 2 of 4"We Were Always Critiquing, We Were Always Throwing Grenades at Things:" In Conversation with Elizabeth Diller - Image 3 of 4"We Were Always Critiquing, We Were Always Throwing Grenades at Things:" In Conversation with Elizabeth Diller - Image 4 of 4We Were Always Critiquing, We Were Always Throwing Grenades at Things: In Conversation with Elizabeth Diller - More Images+ 4

Bofill Taller de Arquitectura Designs Mixed-Use Towers and a Seaside Resort in Albania

Architecture has been at the center of a transformation process in Albania, particularly significant in Tirana, its capital city. In 2017, the winning project for the Tirana 2030 Masterplan was unveiled, designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti, UNLAB, and IND [Inter.National.Design] as part of a competition organized by the Ministry of Urban Development. Aiming to give Tirana a new metropolitan dimension while promoting and preserving green spaces, the strategy integrates a system of open spaces, natural elements, and strategic projects at key points in the city. The multidisciplinary Catalan firm Bofill Taller de Arquitectura has contributed to this transformation with two mixed-use towers in Tirana and a resort project in the coastal town of Dhërmi, reflecting the distinctive aesthetic of Ricardo Bofill's work.

Bofill Taller de Arquitectura Designs Mixed-Use Towers and a Seaside Resort in Albania - Image 1 of 4Bofill Taller de Arquitectura Designs Mixed-Use Towers and a Seaside Resort in Albania - Image 2 of 4Bofill Taller de Arquitectura Designs Mixed-Use Towers and a Seaside Resort in Albania - Image 3 of 4Bofill Taller de Arquitectura Designs Mixed-Use Towers and a Seaside Resort in Albania - Image 4 of 4Bofill Taller de Arquitectura Designs Mixed-Use Towers and a Seaside Resort in Albania - More Images+ 34

“The Kind of Architecture I Try to Achieve Is a Rainbow:” In Conversation With Kengo Kuma

In my 2008 interview with Kengo Kuma in Manhattan—the Tokyo-based architect was in town for a lecture at Cooper Union and to oversee the construction of a house renovation in nearby Connecticut— he summarized the intention of his work for me, "The closest image to the kind of architecture I try to achieve is a rainbow." The architect designs his buildings as a chef would prepare a salad or a florist arrange a bouquet of flowers—by carefully selecting ingredients according to their size, shape, and texture. He then tests whether they should touch, overlap, or keep a distance to let the airflow pass through. The process is closer to a trial-and-error scientific experiment rather than an artistic exercise in projecting visionary forms and images. Although his buildings surely look strikingly artistic and utterly breathtaking. They are both precise and loose, primitive and refined, material and transient. The architect's fascination with materiality is startling, and despite having completed many dozens of buildings all over the world over the course of his distinctive career, in our conversation last month over Zoom, Kuma told me, "I stand at the beginning of a long process of material exploration."

“The Kind of Architecture I Try to Achieve Is a Rainbow:” In Conversation With Kengo Kuma - Image 1 of 4“The Kind of Architecture I Try to Achieve Is a Rainbow:” In Conversation With Kengo Kuma - Image 2 of 4“The Kind of Architecture I Try to Achieve Is a Rainbow:” In Conversation With Kengo Kuma - Image 3 of 4“The Kind of Architecture I Try to Achieve Is a Rainbow:” In Conversation With Kengo Kuma - Image 4 of 4“The Kind of Architecture I Try to Achieve Is a Rainbow:” In Conversation With Kengo Kuma - More Images+ 27