1. ArchDaily
  2. Editor's Choice

Editor's Choice

Vertical Urbanization As Seen From Above

Because of the decrease in the availability of land area and the ever-increasing price per square meter, cities often tend to grow vertically. When we picture large metropolitan areas, we almost always imagine high-rise buildings, and the recognizable skyline becomes an icon that immediately evokes the places in which they are located.

Vertical Urbanization As Seen From Above - Image 1 of 4Vertical Urbanization As Seen From Above - Image 3 of 4Vertical Urbanization As Seen From Above - Image 4 of 4Vertical Urbanization As Seen From Above - Image 7 of 4Vertical Urbanization As Seen From Above - More Images+ 4

Sacred Spaces: What Can Cemeteries Teach Us About Our History and Society?

Sacred Spaces: What Can Cemeteries Teach Us About Our History and Society? - Image 1 of 4Sacred Spaces: What Can Cemeteries Teach Us About Our History and Society? - Image 2 of 4Sacred Spaces: What Can Cemeteries Teach Us About Our History and Society? - Image 3 of 4Sacred Spaces: What Can Cemeteries Teach Us About Our History and Society? - Image 4 of 4Sacred Spaces: What Can Cemeteries Teach Us About Our History and Society? - More Images+ 2

Memento mori is an ancient Latin expression that means "remember that you are mortal." The Roman people used it not to represent a fatalistic approach to death but rather as a way of valuing life.

A few centuries later, as we arrive at our current context and the world reaches the terrifying figure of 2 million deaths as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, memento mori is more relevant than ever.

Maritime Design: Rare Coastal Libraries Around the World

As architecture has evolved to include advanced building envelopes, innovative structural systems, and hybrid programs, new boundaries have been drawn. Sustainable practices and passive strategies have led architects to re-imagine building skins and the relationship between interior and exterior. While different typologies are designed with varied levels of permeability, libraries demand rigorous attention to performative facades and protected programs. This holds especially true when libraries are placed within radically changing landscapes.

Maritime Design: Rare Coastal Libraries Around the World - Image 1 of 4Maritime Design: Rare Coastal Libraries Around the World - Image 2 of 4Maritime Design: Rare Coastal Libraries Around the World - Image 3 of 4Maritime Design: Rare Coastal Libraries Around the World - Image 4 of 4Maritime Design: Rare Coastal Libraries Around the World - More Images+ 5

Color Beyond Aesthetics: The Psychology of Green in Interior Spaces

How many changes have you done to your interior space during this past year? Whether it was a change of furniture layout, repainting the walls, adding more light fixtures or perhaps even removing them, after spending so much time in one place, the space you were once used to didn’t make sense anymore. We could blame the overall situation for how we’ve been feeling lately, but as a matter of fact, the interior environment plays a huge role in how we feel or behave as well. However, if you were wondering why some neighbors seem much more undisturbed and serene even in the midst of a pandemic, it could be because the interior is greener on the other side.

Color Beyond Aesthetics: The Psychology of Green in Interior Spaces - Image 1 of 4Color Beyond Aesthetics: The Psychology of Green in Interior Spaces - Image 2 of 4Color Beyond Aesthetics: The Psychology of Green in Interior Spaces - Image 3 of 4Color Beyond Aesthetics: The Psychology of Green in Interior Spaces - Image 4 of 4Color Beyond Aesthetics: The Psychology of Green in Interior Spaces - More Images+ 21

Kevin Lynch's Images of the City Through Aerial Photography

“There seems to be a public image of any given city which is the overlap of many individual images," American urban planner Kevin Lynch once said. "Or perhaps there is a series of public images, each held by some significant number of citizens,” he added.

Following this remark, in his book "The Image of the City" (1960), Lynch begins an analysis around the elements that constitute what he considers to be the image of the city. While introducing, describing, and illustrating these elements as physical, perceptible objects, Lynch considers that other non-physical factors such as history, function, or even the name of the city also play a significant role in the construction of this imageability.

Kevin Lynch's Images of the City Through Aerial Photography - Image 1 of 4Kevin Lynch's Images of the City Through Aerial Photography - Image 2 of 4Kevin Lynch's Images of the City Through Aerial Photography - Image 8 of 4Kevin Lynch's Images of the City Through Aerial Photography - Image 10 of 4Kevin Lynch's Images of the City Through Aerial Photography - More Images+ 7

The State of Architecture: ArchDaily 2021 Trend Forecasting & Analytics

With the major happenings of the past year, our built environment and people’s needs within it seemed to change. Different ways of Architectural thinking and design solutions were put forth, showing how global events are capable of pushing the limits of the profession, increasing our responsibility, and also our opportunities to contribute to a better quality of life in every possible way. At ArchDaily, we have continued to connect with architects and designers from all over the globe and have shared diverse works, all displaying relevant implementations and architectural solutions that have an impact on our community. 

In response to the published works, we have experienced different reader behaviors that indicate how architectural production can actually have an impact on designers and non-designers all over the world. This led us to create ArchDaily’s Annual Architecture Report which analyzes the most popular trends and topics in the architecture world over the past year, in an effort to understand, discuss and forecast the trends for 2021.

Concrete Pipes Transformed Into Architectural Elements and Living Spaces

Urban infrastructures provide comfort to inhabitants and mitigate the risks of disasters such as flooding. Underground systems specifically conceal urban infrastructures from public view and are configured as real mazes under the streets. The distribution of drinking water, urban drainage, sewage, and even electrical wiring and fiber optics in some cases, pass under our feet without us noticing. To this end, the industry developed precast concrete parts for about 100 years that provided construction speed, adequate resistance to force, and durability against time. Concrete pipes with circular sections, in many diverse diameters, are perhaps the most used conduits and are ubiquitous around the world. But there are also those who use these apparently functional elements in creative architectural contexts as well.

Urban Planning and Water Bodies: Florida’s Aquatic Land Cover

Urban Planning and Water Bodies: Florida’s Aquatic Land Cover - Image 1 of 4Urban Planning and Water Bodies: Florida’s Aquatic Land Cover - Image 2 of 4Urban Planning and Water Bodies: Florida’s Aquatic Land Cover - Image 5 of 4Urban Planning and Water Bodies: Florida’s Aquatic Land Cover - Image 6 of 4Urban Planning and Water Bodies: Florida’s Aquatic Land Cover - More Images+ 3

The state of Florida, in the United States, is bordered to the south, east, and west by the Atlantic Ocean, with a coastline of over two thousand kilometers in length, and is characterized by extensive areas of lakes, rivers, and ponds. Land booms during the early and mid-20th century resulted in the development of new communities and the expansion of low-density suburbia across many parts of the state, which frequently incorporated the abundant water resources, sometimes failing in their efforts.

Construction and Design Trends of 2021: The Recurring, The Popular, The Relevant and The Substantial

As we look back at the architecture projects we have published in 2020, as part of our yearly review, we were able to distinguish many recurring elements and solutions in terms of materials, programs, and functions.

Since the architecture industry moves slightly slower than others, we found that many things in the construction and design that have been building up these past years have come out making strong statements this 2020. We believe, therefore, that trends in the architecture world could be defined not only by what has been recurrent and popular but also, what has proven to be relevant and substantial.

Construction and Design Trends of 2021: The Recurring, The Popular, The Relevant and The Substantial  - Image 1 of 4Construction and Design Trends of 2021: The Recurring, The Popular, The Relevant and The Substantial  - Image 2 of 4Construction and Design Trends of 2021: The Recurring, The Popular, The Relevant and The Substantial  - Image 3 of 4Construction and Design Trends of 2021: The Recurring, The Popular, The Relevant and The Substantial  - Image 4 of 4Construction and Design Trends of 2021: The Recurring, The Popular, The Relevant and The Substantial  - More Images+ 44

Ko Panyi: A Floating Village in Thailand

When we talk about cities or their lesser variations – villages, towns, communities –, we are used to evoking stereotyped scenarios that relate to streets, cars, buildings, and we often end up forgetting that there are plenty of other surprisingly unique patterns.

Many people study the cities and wonder about the exact moment when they were invented, given that they are open, unfinished works in progress. Some assume that their origin was due to the need for protection, which caused humans to quit nomadic lifestyles and settle as groups in a specific land to increase their chances of survival.  

Ko Panyi: A Floating Village in Thailand - Image 1 of 4Ko Panyi: A Floating Village in Thailand - Image 2 of 4Ko Panyi: A Floating Village in Thailand - Image 3 of 4Ko Panyi: A Floating Village in Thailand - Featured ImageKo Panyi: A Floating Village in Thailand - More Images+ 3

Building Community: The Women of Sasaki Designing More Sustainable and Inclusive Futures

Celebrating community, three interdisciplinary leaders of design firm Sasaki are building space for change. Defining the future through collective, contextual, and values-driven projects, they are showing how working together produces greater impact. Following the belief that better design comes through open exchange and deep engagement, each of these women are creating more sustainable and inclusive futures.

Building Community: The Women of Sasaki Designing More Sustainable and Inclusive Futures - Arch Daily InterviewsBuilding Community: The Women of Sasaki Designing More Sustainable and Inclusive Futures - Arch Daily InterviewsBuilding Community: The Women of Sasaki Designing More Sustainable and Inclusive Futures - Arch Daily InterviewsBuilding Community: The Women of Sasaki Designing More Sustainable and Inclusive Futures - Arch Daily InterviewsBuilding Community: The Women of Sasaki Designing More Sustainable and Inclusive Futures - More Images+ 7

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.