1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture News

Architecture News

Cats in the Right Place at the Wrong Time in Architectural Photography

Cats in the Right Place at the Wrong Time in Architectural Photography - Films & ArchitectureCats in the Right Place at the Wrong Time in Architectural Photography - Films & ArchitectureCats in the Right Place at the Wrong Time in Architectural Photography - Films & ArchitectureCats in the Right Place at the Wrong Time in Architectural Photography - Films & ArchitectureCats in the Right Place at the Wrong Time in Architectural Photography - More Images+ 14

Cats just don’t care. They don’t care if you bought them gourmet food. They don’t care if you got them customized furniture or luxury cardboard boxes, and they definitely don’t care if they are barging into an architectural photo shoot (although, we do think it’s their way of being the center of attention).

Don't believe us? Here's a collection of photographs collected from our projects database where cats are clearly not trying to steal the spotlight.

Fiber Cement Facades in Architecture: 9 Notable Examples

How to build light and modular facades with a rustic and monolithic appearance?

Composed of cement, cellulose, and mineral materials, fiber cement allows us to clad walls in a light, non-combustible, and rain-resistant way, generating facades with different textures, colors, and tones. Its panels are easily manageable and perforable, and can configure ventilated facades when installed with a certain separation between the rear wall. Check out 9 projects below that have cleverly used fiber cement as the primary material in facades.

Brick by Brick: Rethinking Masonry Construction in Iran

Iran’s architecture has long been rooted in Persian culture. From tea houses and pavilions to domestic huts and elaborate mosques, the country’s built environment is tied to these influences, as well as the landscape and its broader context. At the heart of Iran’s more recent projects is a desire to reinterpret history through new spaces and forms.

Brick by Brick: Rethinking Masonry Construction in Iran - Image 1 of 4Brick by Brick: Rethinking Masonry Construction in Iran - Image 2 of 4Brick by Brick: Rethinking Masonry Construction in Iran - Image 3 of 4Brick by Brick: Rethinking Masonry Construction in Iran - Image 4 of 4Brick by Brick: Rethinking Masonry Construction in Iran - More Images+ 16

Spotlight: Zaha Hadid

In her lifetime, Pritzker prize-winning architect, fashion designer and artist Zaha Hadid (31 October 1950 – 31 March 2016) became one of the most recognizable faces of our field. Revered and denounced in equal measure for the sensuous curved forms for which she was known, Hadid rose to prominence not solely through parametricism but by designing spaces to occupy geometries in new ways. Despite her tragically early death in March of 2016, the projects now being completed by her office without their original lead designer continue to push boundaries both creative and technological, while the fearless media presence she cultivated in recent decades has cemented her place in society as a woman who needs just one name: Zaha.

Spotlight: Zaha Hadid - Featured ImageSpotlight: Zaha Hadid - Image 1 of 4Spotlight: Zaha Hadid - Image 26 of 4Spotlight: Zaha Hadid - Image 27 of 4Spotlight: Zaha Hadid - More Images+ 31

Brooks + Scarpa Design a Toolkit for Affordable Housing

Brooks + Scarpa and Plant Prefab have developed a new toolkit to address housing shortages. Scalable as an infill solution, the Nest toolkit can be configured in multiple ways using site types and typical lot sizes, or a combination of them. The toolkit was made to address LA’s shortage of supportive housing for the homeless and provide flexibility to meet the needs of a particular site, neighborhood, and bed count.

Brooks + Scarpa Design a Toolkit for Affordable Housing - Image 1 of 4Brooks + Scarpa Design a Toolkit for Affordable Housing - Image 2 of 4Brooks + Scarpa Design a Toolkit for Affordable Housing - Image 3 of 4Brooks + Scarpa Design a Toolkit for Affordable Housing - Image 4 of 4Brooks + Scarpa Design a Toolkit for Affordable Housing - More Images+ 7

Architecture in Black: A Selection of The Best Dark Interiors

The use of light and shadow in architecture can have several nuances. The traditional Japanese culture stands out for working with spaces of dim light, kind of dull. On the other hand, modern architecture and minimalism work along with illuminating spaces through the use of white spaces and reflection of light as a recurring resource.

Even so, black, dark spaces and minimalism also converse in the same language that provides new possibilities for lighting design and use of new materials. We now present you a selection of the best contemporary interior spaces that use black as the protagonist element, generating introspective but dramatic environments at the same time.

Penthouses Designed by BIG for KING Toronto in Canada

Designed by BIG, in collaboration with Allied and Westbank, KING Toronto portrays architecture’s ability to create a community and meet the challenges faced by society nowadays. Located in Canada’s King Street West neighborhood, the project is a direct response to the context.

Penthouses Designed by BIG for KING Toronto in Canada - Image 1 of 4Penthouses Designed by BIG for KING Toronto in Canada - Image 2 of 4Penthouses Designed by BIG for KING Toronto in Canada - Image 3 of 4Penthouses Designed by BIG for KING Toronto in Canada - Image 4 of 4Penthouses Designed by BIG for KING Toronto in Canada - More Images+ 6

Baha’i Temple by Hariri Pontarini Wins 2019 RAIC International Prize

The Baha’i Temple of South America in Santiago, Chile, designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects of Toronto was selected as the winner of the 2019 RAIC International Prize, by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC).

Baha’i Temple by Hariri Pontarini Wins 2019 RAIC International Prize - Image 1 of 4Baha’i Temple by Hariri Pontarini Wins 2019 RAIC International Prize - Image 2 of 4Baha’i Temple by Hariri Pontarini Wins 2019 RAIC International Prize - Image 3 of 4Baha’i Temple by Hariri Pontarini Wins 2019 RAIC International Prize - Image 4 of 4Baha’i Temple by Hariri Pontarini Wins 2019 RAIC International Prize - More Images+ 44

Open Air: Vietnam’s Neo-Traditional Housing Projects

Vietnam has a rich history of traditional architecture. From Rong houses and Trinh Tuong residences to the stilt longhouses of the Ede people, the country has a depth of vernacular construction methods and styles. Today, architects are reinterpreting past building techniques to create neo-traditional homes grounded in contemporary life.

Open Air: Vietnam’s Neo-Traditional Housing Projects - Image 1 of 4Open Air: Vietnam’s Neo-Traditional Housing Projects - Image 2 of 4Open Air: Vietnam’s Neo-Traditional Housing Projects - Image 3 of 4Open Air: Vietnam’s Neo-Traditional Housing Projects - Image 4 of 4Open Air: Vietnam’s Neo-Traditional Housing Projects - More Images+ 8

Urban Mining Trilogy at C-LAB Investigates Circular Material Reuse

Located in a prime location in the city of Taipei, the invaluable large open space at the Taiwan Contemporary Culture Lab (C-LAB) is historically significant as it used to be home to the Industrial Research Institute of the Taiwanese Governor-General’s Office and also the Air Force Command Headquarters under the Ministry of National Defense. Since the Ministry of Culture took over its operations in 2018, C-LAB has become a place for art and cultural experimentation, with various participatory events and actions initiated and reflections and imaginations for contemporary urban space and lifestyle projected.

The Problem with the “Designification” of Health Care

A wave of service providers and clinics is using catchy branding and interior design to attract patients frustrated with old-guard medical facilities. But is further commodification of health care the answer?

A few years ago I signed up for Oscar health insurance. Cofounded in 2012 by Joshua Kushner and headquartered in New York City, it was the health-care plan most of my similarly freelance friends used. Plus, if you lived in Brooklyn, as I did at the time, you could easily visit its Oscar Center, a primary-care space in a warehouse loft that also boasted the offices of literary magazines. I went in for a checkup, feeling slightly nervous as with any doctor appointment, but was surprised when I opened the door onto a spacious, minimalist, wood-floored, primary-colored office installed with glass walls and snake plants. There was even a yoga room adorned with the decal “Let the Healing Begin.”

ZHA/COX Team Wins Western Sydney Airport Competition

Selected from forty national and international applicants, Zaha Hadid Architects and Cox Architecture won the international design competition for the new Western Sydney Airport (WSA).

ZHA/COX Team Wins Western Sydney Airport Competition - Image 1 of 4ZHA/COX Team Wins Western Sydney Airport Competition - Image 2 of 4ZHA/COX Team Wins Western Sydney Airport Competition - Image 6 of 4ZHA/COX Team Wins Western Sydney Airport Competition - Image 3 of 4ZHA/COX Team Wins Western Sydney Airport Competition - More Images+ 4

First Smart Forest City in Mexico Designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti

Commisionned by Grupo Karim's, and designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti, the first Smart Forest City in Mexico will focus on innovation and environmental quality. The city balances green and built spaces, and is completely food and energy self-sufficient.

First Smart Forest City in Mexico Designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti  - Image 5 of 4First Smart Forest City in Mexico Designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti  - Image 2 of 4First Smart Forest City in Mexico Designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti  - Image 3 of 4First Smart Forest City in Mexico Designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti  - Image 6 of 4First Smart Forest City in Mexico Designed by Stefano Boeri Architetti  - More Images+ 3

Spotlight: SANAA

Founded in 1995 by architects Kazuyo Sejima (born 29 October 1956) and Ryue Nishizawa (born 7 February 1966), SANAA is world-renowned for its white, light buildings grounded in the architects’ Japanese cultural origins. Despite the white exteriors, their architecture is far from modernist; the constant incorporation of ambiguity and doubt in SANAA’s buildings is refreshing and playful, taking the reflective properties of glass and brightness of white to a new level.

Spotlight: SANAA - Featured ImageSpotlight: SANAA - Image 3 of 4Spotlight: SANAA - Image 4 of 4Spotlight: SANAA - Image 6 of 4Spotlight: SANAA - More Images+ 7

America's Most Admired Architectural Schools 2020 Ranked

The annual DesignIntelligence architecture school ranking for 2020 classified the establishments according to the “most admired” rather than the “best”, for the second year in a row. The subjective classification is based on the responses of hiring professionals.  

TED Talk: Bjarke Ingels Explores Living and Building on Mars

Bjarke Ingels Group has been working on the Mars Science City project after the United Arab Emirates announced the initiative in 2017. The $140 Million USD (AED 500 million) research city aims to serve as a “viable and realistic model” for the simulation of human occupation of the martian landscape. The project is designed with a team of Emirati scientists, engineers and designers from the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Center.

TED Talk: Bjarke Ingels Explores Living and Building on Mars - Image 1 of 4TED Talk: Bjarke Ingels Explores Living and Building on Mars - Image 2 of 4TED Talk: Bjarke Ingels Explores Living and Building on Mars - Image 3 of 4TED Talk: Bjarke Ingels Explores Living and Building on Mars - Image 4 of 4TED Talk: Bjarke Ingels Explores Living and Building on Mars - More Images+ 1

Whimsical Beach Installation Transforms Fabric to Cinema Screen

Since 2017, the Cyprus School of Architecture (CYSOA) holds a series of architectural competitions of installations and design implementations on the public beach of Geroskipou, Greece.

2018’s winning proposal by Russian firm KATARSIS Architects presented a beach cinema project titled Sky Cinema, a translucent structure that serves as both a canopy and screen.

Whimsical Beach Installation Transforms Fabric to Cinema Screen - Image 1 of 4Whimsical Beach Installation Transforms Fabric to Cinema Screen - Image 2 of 4Whimsical Beach Installation Transforms Fabric to Cinema Screen - Image 3 of 4Whimsical Beach Installation Transforms Fabric to Cinema Screen - Image 4 of 4Whimsical Beach Installation Transforms Fabric to Cinema Screen - More Images+ 5

Sustainable Parking Space for an Eco-Responsible Generation

Every year, France uses 66,600 tons of plant protection pesticides for its agriculture and produces 4.5 million tons of plastics, of which only 22% are recycled. Almost 48,000 deaths are attributed to fine particle pollution and automobile activity, and the planet is still expected to endure. In such grave situations, urban developments have become subject to new ecological criteria that focus on finding biodiverse solutions for both public and private sectors.

In compliance with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Agenda 2030 that aims to find eco-responsible urban solutions, Studio NAB created Car Parks 2.0, an ecological parking space that rethinks commercial parking areas and transforms it into a more sustainable and humane place.

Sustainable Parking Space for an Eco-Responsible Generation   - Image 1 of 4Sustainable Parking Space for an Eco-Responsible Generation   - Image 2 of 4Sustainable Parking Space for an Eco-Responsible Generation   - Image 3 of 4Sustainable Parking Space for an Eco-Responsible Generation   - Image 4 of 4Sustainable Parking Space for an Eco-Responsible Generation   - More Images+ 18

Urban Cinematics and the Revenge of Place / François Penz for the Shenzhen Biennale (UABB) 2019

What happens when the sensor-imbued city acquires the ability to see – almost as if it had eyes? Ahead of the 2019 Shenzhen Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture (UABB), titled "Urban Interactions," ArchDaily is working with the curators of the "Eyes of the City" section at the Biennial to stimulate a discussion on how new technologies – and Artificial Intelligence in particular – might impact architecture and urban life. Here you can read the “Eyes of the City” curatorial statement by Carlo Ratti, the Politecnico di Torino and SCUT.

Ever since the Lumière brothers trained their camera on La Place des Cordeliers in Lyon in 1895, cinema has shaped our collective urban imagination. For 125 years, film has relentlessly recorded the deaths and lives of not just great American cities but of all great – and not so great – cities the world over. Film-makers have observed, expressed, characterized, interpreted and portrayed hundreds of thousands of city streets. By charting the cities’ evolution across the 20th century to present days, films are the quintessential Eyes on and of the City.

Flying Panels – How Concrete Panels Changed the World

Flying Panels - How Concrete Panels Changed the World is a new ArkDes exhibition designed by Note Design Studio and curated by Pedro Ignacio Alonso and Hugo Palmarola - authors of the Monolith Controversies exhibition, the winner of the Silver Lion award at the 14th Venice Architecture Biennale in 2014.

It brings together a series models and material as posters, paintings, films, toys, cartoons and opera sets are gathered to reflect on how concrete panels influenced culture for the construction of a new society.

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