1. ArchDaily
  2. Pentagram

Pentagram: The Latest Architecture and News

Maine’s Portland Museum of Art Reveals the Finalists’ Concepts for Campus Expansion Project

Four teams have been declared the finalists in the competition to design the Portland Museum of Art campus expansion located in Portland, Maine. The finalist teams are led by Adjaye Associates, Lever Architecture, MVRDV and Toshiko Mori Architect + Johnston Marklee + Preston Scott Cohen. The project includes a 60,000 square feet expansion in the form of a six or seven-story structure planned to accommodate an increase in the number of visits and a growing collection of art. The museum is now asking for public feedback on the designs, as the projects are on view at PMA until December 11th.

Maine’s Portland Museum of Art Reveals the Finalists’ Concepts for Campus Expansion Project - Image 6 of 4Maine’s Portland Museum of Art Reveals the Finalists’ Concepts for Campus Expansion Project - Image 19 of 4Maine’s Portland Museum of Art Reveals the Finalists’ Concepts for Campus Expansion Project - Image 13 of 4Maine’s Portland Museum of Art Reveals the Finalists’ Concepts for Campus Expansion Project - Image 10 of 4Maine’s Portland Museum of Art Reveals the Finalists’ Concepts for Campus Expansion Project - More Images+ 19

Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture to Change Name with New Branding

Following a successful several-year long campaign to maintain its accreditation as an institute of higher learning, the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture has announced a name change and rebranding, as part of efforts stipulated by the Higher Learning Commission to distance itself from the larger Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. As a nod to the institution’s origins as Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin Fellowship, the school will now be known as the School of Architecture at Taliesin.

Michael Bierut Talks Architecture, Graphic Design, and How to (Every Once in a While) Change the World

Graphic designers are the masked superheroes of the design world. They shape the way people interact with everyday objects, often at a subconscious level, and create identities for events, services and businesses. Michael Bierut, with his familiar designs for Saks 5th Avenue, New York City parking signs, Verizon, Billboard, and most recently, Hillary Clinton’s much talked-about campaign logo, is a prime example of a man looking out for public aesthetic good. Now, with the release of his book, "How To use graphic design to sell things, explain things, make things look better, make people laugh, make people cry, and (every once in a while) change the world," and a retrospective exhibition of his works coming to a close this weekend at the School of Visual Arts, Bierut’s mask has been lifted.