1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture News

Architecture News

Bathroom & Kitchen Fixtures: 12 Projects to Get You Inspired

As an architectural project comes to its last phases, it is time to put together the smaller details in bathrooms and kitchens, which means choosing finishes for the walls and floors, as well as the countertops, and picking the right fittings and fixtures. These elements are essential for a well-designed space, regardless of the style.

Graham Foundation Announces Names of 2021 Organizations Grant Recipients

The Graham Foundation has announced the award of 69 new scholarships to individuals around the world who support architectural projects. The funded projects represent diverse lines of research with original ideas that advance our understanding of the designed environment.

Selected from more than 500 proposals, the funded projects include exhibitions, publications, films, and performances that promote rigorous academic study, stimulate experimentation, and foster critical discourse in architecture. Innovative projects are led by established and emerging architects, artists, curators, filmmakers, historians, and photographers, among other professionals.

“Most of the People Thought it was Ugly - Like a Petrol Station": David Chipperfield on the Neue Nationalgalerie's Renovation

When David Chipperfield was asked about what visitors should expect to see when he concludes the renovation of Mies van der Rohe’s Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, he said: “Imagine a 1965 Mercedes. It looks fine, but it’s falling apart on the inside. We want to put it in the shop, take it apart and put it back together again, so when someone turns on the switch - the engine will work.” Due to the ongoing pandemic health regulations, the 2021 re-opening saw a limited number of journalists and visitors to tour alongside Chipperfield and explore the newly-renovated architecture. Editor and photographer Gili Merin had the opportunity to photograph the project during the pre-opening event and interview the world-renowned architect.

“Most of the People Thought it was Ugly - Like a Petrol Station": David Chipperfield on the Neue Nationalgalerie's Renovation - Image 1 of 4“Most of the People Thought it was Ugly - Like a Petrol Station": David Chipperfield on the Neue Nationalgalerie's Renovation - Image 2 of 4“Most of the People Thought it was Ugly - Like a Petrol Station": David Chipperfield on the Neue Nationalgalerie's Renovation - Image 3 of 4“Most of the People Thought it was Ugly - Like a Petrol Station": David Chipperfield on the Neue Nationalgalerie's Renovation - Image 4 of 4“Most of the People Thought it was Ugly - Like a Petrol Station: David Chipperfield on the Neue Nationalgalerie's Renovation - More Images+ 19

MVRDV Reimagines the Future of the World's Oldest Social Housing Complex

Celebrating the 500th anniversary of the Fuggerei social housing in Augsburg, Germany, MVRDV has collaborated with Fugger Foundation to initiate a conversation about the future architectural and urban plans of Fuggereien, the world’s oldest social housing complex. Throughout the upcoming months, the Fugger Foundations are hosting interdisciplinary debates that highlight Fuggerei’s guiding urban principles and discuss challenges about the field of architecture, politics, culture, and sciences, by notable individuals in each respective field.

MVRDV Reimagines the Future of the World's Oldest Social Housing Complex - Featured ImageMVRDV Reimagines the Future of the World's Oldest Social Housing Complex - Image 1 of 4MVRDV Reimagines the Future of the World's Oldest Social Housing Complex - Image 2 of 4MVRDV Reimagines the Future of the World's Oldest Social Housing Complex - Image 3 of 4MVRDV Reimagines the Future of the World's Oldest Social Housing Complex - More Images

Sou Fujimoto's House of Hungarian Music Nears Completion

The House of Hungarian Music is taking shape within Budapest's City Park. With the structure and the design's distinctive roof completed, construction work is underway for the interior of the music hall. Nestled within the park's trees, the project designed by Sou Fujimoto features an extensive, horizontally uninterrupted glass volume topped by a perforated roof which allows natural light to penetrate all levels of the building.

Sou Fujimoto's House of Hungarian Music Nears Completion  - Image 1 of 4Sou Fujimoto's House of Hungarian Music Nears Completion  - Image 2 of 4Sou Fujimoto's House of Hungarian Music Nears Completion  - Image 3 of 4Sou Fujimoto's House of Hungarian Music Nears Completion  - Image 4 of 4Sou Fujimoto's House of Hungarian Music Nears Completion  - More Images+ 19

6 Steps for Designing Healthy Cities

By some estimates, cities consume over two-thirds of the world’s energy, and account for more than 70% of global CO2 emissions: a figure sure to increase as the global migration from rural to urban areas continues. In the pursuit of exploring new models for how healthy cities could more effectively sustain these demands, Dutch design and research studio FABRICations has investigated how cities of the Netherlands can reduce carbon emissions through new design-led approaches.

Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City

Canada’s Queen City has become renowned for its housing boom. As the most populous location in the country, Toronto is also one of the world’s hottest luxury real estate markets. An hub for arts, business, and media, the city is sited on a sloping plateau with a unique ravine system. While it boasts incredible architecture and high-end designs, Toronto risks a housing correction. Rapid increases in home prices, overvaluation, and overbuilding have all attributed to the city’s mounting situation. Amidst these unstable conditions and uncertainty, new residential projects continue to be built.

Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City - Image 1 of 4Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City - Image 2 of 4Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City - Image 3 of 4Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City - Image 4 of 4Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City - More Images+ 5

ArchDaily & Strelka Award: Last Days to Vote and Decide the Finalists

ArchDaily, Strelka Institute, and Strelka KB have selected a long list of 50 architectural projects from Armenia, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan for the second edition of The ArchDaily & Strelka Award. The open call invited emerging architects to submit their built projects that emphasize sustainability, research-based and participatory design, and the innovative use of materials. Architects and architecture and design firms that started their practice no more than 10 years ago could apply with projects that were built in the past five years.

Until August 26th, the readers of ArchDaily and Strelka Mag can vote for the projects that will make the shortlist.



Art, Soul and Education: 20 Award-Winning Projects with a Brilliant Touch 

 | Sponsored Content

Art, Soul and Education: 20 Award-Winning Projects with a Brilliant Touch  - Image 1 of 4Art, Soul and Education: 20 Award-Winning Projects with a Brilliant Touch  - Image 2 of 4Art, Soul and Education: 20 Award-Winning Projects with a Brilliant Touch  - Image 3 of 4Art, Soul and Education: 20 Award-Winning Projects with a Brilliant Touch  - Image 4 of 4Art, Soul and Education: 20 Award-Winning Projects with a Brilliant Touch  - More Images+ 33

The world’s architects and interior designers do not simply design space. They take existing space and redefine and reinterpret it—along with its history, its surroundings and its culture. If the designer succeeds in capturing the very essence of a place, indoors or outdoors, and in filling it with new life, it can be described as outstanding design. And outstanding designs have won the iF Design Award again in 2021. Be they spaces for discovery or remembrance, for learning or for prayer, the iF Design Award has gone across categories and types of building to architectural and interior design projects that could hardly be more different, yet have “The CreatiFe Power of Design” in common. But what does that mean?

Oppenheim Architecture Reveals Luxury Hotel & Residences on Albanian Coast

Oppenheim Architecture have unveiled the design of the Jali Hotel and Residences, a new luxury complex on Albania's southern coast. The project will nestle in the site's picturesque landscape and seaside, and provide visitors and residents with a public square, recreational amenities, and access to a vibrant beachside club that pay homage to traditional Albanian coastal structures.

Oppenheim Architecture Reveals Luxury Hotel & Residences on Albanian Coast  - Image 1 of 4Oppenheim Architecture Reveals Luxury Hotel & Residences on Albanian Coast  - Image 2 of 4Oppenheim Architecture Reveals Luxury Hotel & Residences on Albanian Coast  - Image 3 of 4Oppenheim Architecture Reveals Luxury Hotel & Residences on Albanian Coast  - Image 4 of 4Oppenheim Architecture Reveals Luxury Hotel & Residences on Albanian Coast  - More Images+ 8

New Regulations and Private Initiatives are Pushing the Transition to Clean Energy

Following the recent evolution of the climate crisis, policymakers and private companies are getting behind the transition towards clean energy. California is set to mandate solar panels and battery storage for new buildings in a move towards establishing a 100% clean energy grid, while across the US, public schools are redesigned to operate on green energy. In Europe, the EU launched a call to establish an offshore renewable energies working group that would help define the framework for reaching the EU’s ambition of at least 300 GW of offshore wind and 40 GW of ocean energies by 2050. At the same time, furniture manufacturer IKEA announced it would start selling renewable energy to Swedish households.

New Regulations and Private Initiatives are Pushing the Transition to Clean Energy - Image 1 of 4New Regulations and Private Initiatives are Pushing the Transition to Clean Energy - Image 2 of 4New Regulations and Private Initiatives are Pushing the Transition to Clean Energy - Image 3 of 4New Regulations and Private Initiatives are Pushing the Transition to Clean Energy - Image 4 of 4New Regulations and Private Initiatives are Pushing the Transition to Clean Energy - More Images

10 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves

10 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves - Image 6 of 4
House in Cunha / Arquipélago Arquitetos. Photo: © Federico Cairoli

10 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves - Image 1 of 410 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves - Image 2 of 410 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves - Image 3 of 410 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves - Image 4 of 410 Off-Grid Kitchens With Wood-Burning Stoves - More Images+ 6

A wood-burning stove (or wood burner or log burner in the UK) is a heating appliance used for cooking. Food cooked on a wood-burning stove tends to have a more intense flavor since it requires a slow, artisanal process that results in more complex dishes. For this reason, these stoves are becoming a popular choice for people who want to create a unique environment for family and friends to gather at home for a delicious meal.

The Refurbishment and Adaptive Reuse of Brutalist Architecture

"Demolition is a waste of many things – a waste of energy, a waste of material, and a waste of history," says Pritzker-winning architect Anne Lacaton. In recent years, refurbishment and adaptive reuse have become ubiquitous within the architectural discourse, as the profession is becoming more aware of issues such as waste, use of resources and embedded carbon emissions. However, the practice of updating the existing building stock lacks consistency, especially when it comes to Brutalist heritage. The following explores the challenges and opportunities of refurbishment and adaptive reuse of post-war architecture, highlighting how these strategies can play a significant role in addressing the climate crisis and translating the net-zero emissions goal into reality while also giving new life to existing spaces.

The Refurbishment and Adaptive Reuse of Brutalist Architecture - Image 1 of 4The Refurbishment and Adaptive Reuse of Brutalist Architecture - Image 2 of 4The Refurbishment and Adaptive Reuse of Brutalist Architecture - Image 3 of 4The Refurbishment and Adaptive Reuse of Brutalist Architecture - Image 4 of 4The Refurbishment and Adaptive Reuse of Brutalist Architecture - More Images+ 1

The Invention of Public Space Shows the City as a Product of Negotiation

In this week's reprint from the Architect's Newspaper, author Karen Kubey, an urbanist specializing in housing and health questions if the invention of Public Space is "Invented Or Agreed Upon?" Basing her ideas on a book by Mariana Mogilevich, The Invention of Public Space, the article asks if public spaces are a product of negotiation in the city.

Factors to Consider During Site Analysis

Deciding where a building should go is a complex negotiation of visible and invisible, objective and subjective forces. Architects perform site analysis in order to identify and choreograph all these factors, but which factors do they focus on? This video is a survey (pun intended) of what goes into locating where a building should go on the Earth’s surface. From legal requirements like lot lines and setbacks, to infrastructural concerns like service hookup locations and pedestrian ways, to environmental factors like sunlight and topography, the video goes through how architects and contractors position structures. In addition to reviewing general rules of thumb, the video also includes some important architectural examples like the Casa Malaparte and OMA’s Student Center at IIT to inspire unique ways to approach the subject.

Mecanoo Receives 2021 European Prize for Architecture

The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies and The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design have presented Netherlands-based architecture firm Mecanoo with Europe's highest award of architecture for the year 2021. The jury awarded the firm for their human-centered approach that prioritizes the "enrichment of human life through a lens of generosity and freedom of use", benefiting the users socially, ecologically and economically.

Kengo Kuma Designs Children's Literature Museum in Tokyo

Kengo Kuma & Associates has designed the Edogawa City Eiko Kadono Children's Literature Museum (tentative name), a new cultural venue where the young can experience the imaginary world envisioned by acclaimed Japanese children book author Eiko Kadono. Located on the banks of the Edogawa river and within the natural setting of Nagisa Park in Tokyo, the project features an array of volumes following the hill's slope and an overhanging roof that expands towards the landscape.

18 Unmissable Projects by Eladio Dieste in Uruguay

Eladio Dieste, the engineer behind "reinforced ceramic" and double-curved arches marked his spot as one of the most important figures in architecture, not only in his native Uruguay, but in Latin America and beyond. Here, we invite you to take a look at just some of the engineer's work, from his widely-recognized churches like the Church of San Pedro and the Christ the Worker Church in Atlántida- to his factories, silos, and gymnasiums, all of which form an important part of the region's architectural repertoire.

To help us in our mission to bring Dieste's work to our readers, the Audiovisual Media Service of the Faculty of Architecture, Design, and Urbanism at the University of the Republic has shared the following images as well as the Eladio Dieste page in order to provide a space to learn about his works and writings.

How Can Architecture Combat Flooding? 9 Practical Solutions

Flooding is a significant problem for buildings all around the world, including architectural treasures like the Farnsworth House that have been plagued by the issue time and time again. In particular, one-third of the entire continental U.S. are at risk of flooding this spring, especially the Northern Plains, Upper Midwest, and Deep South. In April of 2019, deadly floods decimated parts of Mozambique, Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Iran as well, resulting in a low estimate of 1,000 deaths while tens of thousands more were displaced. While architecture cannot solve or even fully protect from the most deadly floods, it is possible – and necessary – to take several protective measures that could mitigate damage and consequently save lives.

How Can Architecture Combat Flooding? 9 Practical Solutions - Image 1 of 4How Can Architecture Combat Flooding? 9 Practical Solutions - Image 2 of 4How Can Architecture Combat Flooding? 9 Practical Solutions - Image 3 of 4How Can Architecture Combat Flooding? 9 Practical Solutions - Image 4 of 4How Can Architecture Combat Flooding? 9 Practical Solutions - More Images+ 9

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.

In alliance with Architonic
Check the latest Architecture NewsCheck the latest Architecture NewsCheck the latest Architecture News

Check the latest Architecture News