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New York: The Latest Architecture and News

Learning Spring School / Platt Byard Dovell White Architects

Learning Spring School / Platt Byard Dovell White Architects - Schools , Facade, Beam, LightingLearning Spring School / Platt Byard Dovell White Architects - Schools , FacadeLearning Spring School / Platt Byard Dovell White Architects - Schools , Facade, Handrail, BalconyLearning Spring School / Platt Byard Dovell White Architects - Schools , Kitchen, Beam, Table, Sink, Chair, Lighting, CountertopLearning Spring School / Platt Byard Dovell White Architects - More Images+ 11

"Freedom of Assembly: Public Space Today" by AIA Panel

"Freedom of Assembly: Public Space Today" by AIA Panel - Featured Image
© david_shankbone - http://www.flickr.com/photos/shankbone/. Used under Creative Commons

On December 17, 2011, the New York Chapter of the AIA held a panel discussion about the Occupy Wall Street events that have spurred people from all over the country into political involvement. The discussion featured nine panelists with introductory remarks from Lance Jay Brown and Michael Kimmelman and closing remarks by Ron Shiffman (all listed below). It focused on aspects of the built environment, public spaces and how they reflect the way in which people assemble.

Follow us after the break for more about this discussion, including video.

The Greatest Grid and the Unifinished Grid at The Museum of the City of New York

The Greatest Grid and the Unifinished Grid at The Museum of the City of New York - Image 1 of 4
West Side Improvements, 1868; Courtesy of Museum of the City of New York, J. Clarence Davies Collection, 29.100.2723

Through April 15th, the Museum of the City of New York is exhibiting The Greatest Grid: The Masterplan of Manhattan and The Unifinished Grid: Design Speculations for Manhattan. The two exihibits are in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Commissioners’ Plan of 1811 that transformed New York City into the city of endless streets and avenues we know it today, and speculations as to what the next 200 years will mean for the city.

More on the exhibits after the break.

Coleman Oval Skate Park Proposal / Holm Architecture Office + VM Studio

Coleman Oval Skate Park Proposal / Holm Architecture Office + VM Studio - Image 13 of 4
Courtesy of Holm Architecture Office + VM Studio

Holm Architecture Office (HAO), in collaboration with VM Studio, recently received first place in a competition for the re-design of the Coleman Oval Skate Park in Manhattan. Nine New York design firms were invited to participate in the competition, which was sponsored by Architecture for Humanity and a Gamechangers grant from Nike, a campaign encouraging community organizations to empower youth through sports programs that spur social and economic development. The project is being developed with the New York City Parks & Recreation Department’s Adopt-a-Park program. More images and project description after the break.

Cornell’s NYC Tech Campus Wins Competition

Cornell’s NYC Tech Campus Wins Competition - Featured Image
Copyright Cornell University

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg is set to announce Cornell University and its partner, the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, winner of the intense, yearlong competition to build a New York City Tech Campus on Roosevelt Island. The announcement follows Stanford University’s unexpected withdraw from the competition after tense negotiations with the Bloomberg administration. Meanwhile, last Friday Cornell received a $350 million donation in support of their proposal, being the largest gift the University has ever received.

Urban Umbrella / Young-Hwan Choi

Urban Umbrella / Young-Hwan Choi - Image 1 of 4

Tired of scurrying under makeshift unpleasant scaffolding hovering over the streets of Manhattan? Back in 2009, Bloomberg launched an urban design intervention initiative calling for designers to provide a “fresh new sidewalk shed” to replace its dingy predecessors. Entitled urbanSHED, the international design competition challenged participants to develop a sustainable and economic prototype to be used for New York’s 1,000,000+ linear feet of sidewalks. Such a prototype must meet or exceed the City’s current safety requirements and regulations, and improve technical and structural performance. The winning shed was designed by Young-Hwan Choi, a student from the University of Pennsylvania. The shed is the first design to be approved under the City’s Buildings Bulletin 2011 and will be installted in Lower Manhattan soon!

More about the design after the break. 

Green Hotel in Williamsburg / Oppenheim Architecture + Design

Green Hotel in Williamsburg / Oppenheim Architecture + Design - Image 7 of 4
© Luxigon

Oppenheim Architecture + Design recently won the international competition to design a new hotel in Brooklyn, NY. A third pillar of the Williamsburg Bridge to emerge after 108 years. Their design of the Williamsburg hotel attempts to capture the essence of this vibrant neighborhood. Adjacent to both the Williamsburg Bridge and the historic Williamsburg Savings Bank, the building expresses itself as three dramatically proportioned, rectilinear volumes of varied height and materiality. Soaring high above the neighborhood, the hotel becomes the third pillar of the bridge, while serving as an archetypical tower to the domed basilica of the historical bank.

Sustainability was once again an important issue for Oppenheim Architecture + Design. The hotel will have geothermal, wind, and solar power generation, along with other resource saving strategies, for which they achieved Platinum LEED rating. More images and architects’ description after the break.

2012 New Practices New York Competiton

2012 New Practices New York Competiton - Featured Image
Courtesy of AIA New York

New Practices New York, a biennial competition since 2006, serves as the preeminent platform in New York City to recognize and promote new and innovative architecture and design firms. The juried portfolio competition is sponsored by the New Practices Committee of the AIA New York Chapter and honors firms that have utilized unique and innovative strategies, both for the projects they undertake and for the practices they have established. Participants must register by January 15th. To register and for more detailed information, please visit their website here.

ASAP Launch and Benefit

ASAP Launch and Benefit - Featured Image
Bjarke Ingels/BIG. Danish Pavilion, project. 2010 Shanghai Expo. © Iwan Baan

A new not-for-profit art and architecture organization called ASAP (Archive of Spatial Aesthetics and Praxis), founded by former MoMA Curator Tina di Carlo, launches Monday, December 12 at the top of The Standard, New York with Bjarke Ingels, Alex Schweder La and Jerszy Seymour. More information on the event after the break.

Delancey Underground a.k.a "The Low Line"

Delancey Underground a.k.a "The Low Line" - Image 4 of 4
Courtesy of James Ramsey and Dan Barasch

As the Highline has everyone looking up, James Ramsey and Dan Barasch are asking people to start looking down. James Ramsey’s vision to transform the abandoned Williamsburg Bridge Trolley Terminal into a subterranean park filled with sunlight and lush vegetation is gaining international attention and support. The satellite engineer turned architect has developed a skylight using fiber-optic technology that will naturally light and bring life to this forgotten, graffiti-covered cavity below the streets of New York City.

Continue reading for more information, video and exclusive statements from Ramsey and Barasch.

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John Jay College of Criminal Justice / SOM

John Jay College of Criminal Justice / SOM - Higher Education, Garden, Facade, CityscapeJohn Jay College of Criminal Justice / SOM - Higher Education, Garden, FacadeJohn Jay College of Criminal Justice / SOM - Higher Education, Stairs, Handrail, FacadeJohn Jay College of Criminal Justice / SOM - Higher Education, FacadeJohn Jay College of Criminal Justice / SOM - More Images+ 10

Atlantic Yards: B2 Bklyn / SHoP Architects

Atlantic Yards: B2 Bklyn / SHoP Architects - Image 7 of 4
Courtesy of SHoP Architects

SHoP Architects has shared with us the B2 Bklyn building which will be the first of the residential developments for Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn, New York to break ground, scheduled for 2012. Standing at 32 storeys, it will be the world’s tallest pre-fab building, saving both on cost and waste.

More after the break.

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2012 P.S.1 Shortlist

2012 P.S.1 Shortlist - Featured Image
Photo: Steve and Sara via Flickr. Used under Creative Commons

The Museum of Modern Art and MoMA PS1 has announced the 2012 finalists competing in the 12th annual competition under the Young Architects Program. Each year a group of emerging architects compete for the opportunity to design and construct a summer installation within MoMA PS1’s courtyard.

Video: Rem Koolhaas Lecture, Opening Milstein Hall

Just recently, the author of architectural videos blog shared with us a video on OMA’s founding partner Rem Koolhaas‘ lecture which he gave at Cornell University on October 20th. His lecture was given on the occasion of opening Milstein Hall, the new extension to the faculty of Architecture, Art and Planning designed by OMA.

CANSTRUCTION® Exhibit in NYC

CANSTRUCTION® Exhibit in NYC - Image 3 of 4
The Candard Hotel by DeSimone Consulting Engineers

On November 9th at the World Financial Center, all are invited to watch twenty-six of New York City’s top architecture, engineering and design firms will spend one adrenaline-filled evening configuring over 100,000 cans of food into gravity-defying sculptures for Canstruction, an exhibition, design competition and canned food drive to help feed hungry New Yorkers in need during the Thanksgiving season. While admission is free, visitors to the exhibit are encouraged to support the cause by contributing high-quality non-perishable foods, such as tuna, beans, and canned vegetables.

An annual art show, design competition, and food drive all rolled into one, Canstruction® raises hunger awareness by challenging teams of architects and engineers to create larger-than-life pop art masterpieces made entirely out of unopened cans of food. The eye-popping results will be displayed from November 10 through 21 before being donated to City Harvest for delivery to local community food programs. More information on the exhibit and images of last year’s winners after the break.

Jane Jacobs Forum 2011 Women as Public Intellectuals / The Municipal Art Society

Jane Jacobs Forum 2011 Women as Public Intellectuals / The Municipal Art Society - Featured Image
Courtesy of The Municipal Art Society

To honor the 50th anniversary of Jane Jacob’s The Death and Life of Great American Cities, The Municipal Art Society of New York is hosting the Jane Jacobs Forum focusing on Women as Public Intellectuals. The forum will discuss three prominent female writers: Jane Jacobs, Rachel Carson (Silent Spring) and Betty Friedan (The Female Mystique) all of whom challenged the status quo. Their voices contributed to discussions about urban planning, environmental responsibility and the role of women in society. The forum will be moderated by Robin Pogrebin with five other panelists who will address the circumstances of these women’s successes and the role of women engaged in public critique today.

Reconsidering Postmodernism Conference

Reconsidering Postmodernism Conference - Featured Image
Courtesy of Michael Graves & Associates

The Institute of Classical Architecture & Art announces a two-day conference on November 11-12 dedicated to a rigorous examination of Postmodernism both as expressed in theory and as put into practice in the fourth quarter of the 20th century in America and abroad. The conference’s goal is to bring together top architects, scholars, and critics to discuss why and how Postmodernism occurred, why and how it was soon largely eclipsed, and why and how it has nonetheless continued to influence the field and broader culture – including its lasting impact on the theory and application of urban planning and design. More information on the conference after the break.

Parsons Launches New Urban Graduate Programs

Parsons Launches New Urban Graduate Programs - Featured Image
Courtesy of Parsons The New School for Design

Parsons The New School for Design has announced new graduate programs including a Master of Science in Design and Urban Ecologies and a Master of Arts in Theories of Urban Practice. What makes these programs unique is their focus on urban designers and planners as agents of social change: What kind of deep knowledge do urbanists need to be able to design cities in a much more effectively manner? And how do urbanists use their creative training and visionary skills to engage with the deeper structures of society?The programs represent a wider initiative at Parsons, one of the world’s leading schools of art and design, to offer graduate programs that define the next phase of global design. The programs will launch in Fall 2012. More information on the programs after the break.