
Tokyo: The Latest Architecture and News
Minamicho House / ROOVICE
A House, Resident and Milk Delivery Service / Meguro Architecture Laboratory

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Architects: Meguro Architecture Laboratory
- Area: 148 m²
- Year: 2025
Dining Above the Depot / mtthw
Kakushin Office/Resonance of Green / Moriyuki Ochiai Architects

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Architects: Moriyuki Ochiai Architects
- Area: 100 m²
- Year: 2026
SYMBOLPLUS Office / SYMBOLPLUS INC.

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Architects: SYMBOLPLUS INC.
- Area: 76 m²
- Year: 2024
Pedestrianisation Initiatives and UNStudio’s Central Yards Theatre in Hong Kong: This Week’s Review

Across different geographies and scales, this week's architecture news reflects a sustained focus on how cities and buildings are being recalibrated in response to evolving patterns of movement, work, and collective life. Across multiple contexts, public space and mobility remain central concerns, with streets, downtowns, and large-scale developments serving as testing grounds for new approaches to accessibility, resilience, and everyday use. Pedestrianisation initiatives and community-led visions point to evolving governance models and long-term urban strategies, while cultural and research-driven platforms continue to frame these changes within broader public discourse. In parallel, progress on major mixed-use and corporate projects underscores the growing integration of digital infrastructure, environmental performance, and flexible spatial frameworks within contemporary architecture.
House in Koganei, SA House / OFA (OfficeForArchitects) Architectural Design Office
House 14° / Akaike Kazuhito Architect & Associates

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Architects: Akaike Kazuhito Architect & Associates
- Area: 49 m²
- Year: 2025
Casa Legato / Hugo Kohno Architect Associates

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Architects: Hugo Kohno Architect Associates
- Area: 196 m²
- Year: 2025
Tent Cabin in Omori / HUNE ARCHITECTS
Jakarta Becomes the World’s Most Populous City, According to New UN Data

Jakarta has become the world's most populous city, according to the World Urbanization Prospects 2025 released by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA). Using an updated and harmonized method for defining urban areas, the report estimates Jakarta's population at nearly 42 million, placing it ahead of Dhaka, which is about 40 million, and Tokyo, 33 million. The revised ranking illustrates how updated measurement criteria and continued demographic growth are reshaping understandings of urban scale in Asia and globally.



























