1. ArchDaily
  2. Editor's Choice

Editor's Choice

Miami’s Porsche Design Tower: A Bland Monument of Hubris in the Face of Climate Catastrophe

Florida is a state in denial. Miami is in the midst of one of the largest building booms in the region's history. Dense crane canopies pepper the city's skyline as they soar over forthcoming white, gold, and aqua clad "high end" residential and hotel towers. This massive stream of investment dollars is downright paradoxical considering the impending calamity that surrounds Southern Florida: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicts that the sea level could likely increase almost 35 inches (0.89 meters) by mid-century. If current trends continue, that number is anticipated to rise to up to 80 inches (2.0 meters) by the year 2100, threatening the habitability of the entire metro area.

Given that harrowing scenario, Miami is either refusing to acknowledge the inevitable, or desperately trying to become relevant enough to be saved—not that saving the city is actually feasible. The region sits on extremely porous limestone which pretty much rules out the option of a Netherlands style sea wall. If the Atlantic couldn’t make any horizontal inroads, the rising tide would simply bubble up from below. Miami’s pancake topography doesn’t stand a chance.

MAD Architects Design Veiled Xinhee Design Center in Xiamen

MAD Architects has conceived a new design center for international fashion group Xinhee in the coastal Chinese city of Xiamen. Designed as six petals growing from a central atrium, the 61,000 square meter building will sit on a 15,000 square meter site, and will serve as the home of Xinhee and its six subsidiary brands.

“We envision it as a building with skin-and-bones,” reveals MAD founding principal Ma Yansong, “the correspondence of clothing and architecture is they both explore the relationship between the interior and the exterior.”

MAD Architects Design Veiled Xinhee Design Center in Xiamen - Garden, Facade, ColumnMAD Architects Design Veiled Xinhee Design Center in Xiamen - FacadeMAD Architects Design Veiled Xinhee Design Center in Xiamen - FacadeMAD Architects Design Veiled Xinhee Design Center in Xiamen - FacadeMAD Architects Design Veiled Xinhee Design Center in Xiamen - More Images+ 14

Stanley Tigerman on Learning from Mies, The Younger Generation and "Designing Bridges to Burn"

This article was originally published on Autodesk's Redshift publication as "Inside My Design Mind: Salt-of-the-Earth Lessons From Architect Stanley Tigerman."

It’s no secret Stanley Tigerman has made a few enemies in his career. Chicago’s pugnacious 85-year-old architecture star and elder statesman, who received a lifetime achievement award from the American Institute of Architects in October, is known perhaps as much for his brand of gloves-off honesty as his buildings. In a 2013 interview with Chicago magazine, he summed up the redesign of the city’s Ludwig Mies van der Rohe–designed IBM tower as “shit.”

But there’s a socially minded, nurturing side of Tigerman—designer of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Pacific Garden Mission—that is sometimes lost in the offhand bravado of his public-facing comments. As a member of the Chicago Seven (which protested the predominance of modernism) and a provocateur who has organized seminal forums about architecture’s future, Tigerman is more than just tough talk.

Here, the architect, educator, and curator reveals a generous and expansive mind, praising the uncompromising will of his role model Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and explaining where he finds and nourishes inspiration. He speaks fondly of architecture’s next generation, to whom he offers this advice: Go slow. Don’t copy. Stand firm. Work hard.

Monocle 24 Ask: Why is Architectural Preservation Important?

With UNESCO's recent announcement that 17 buildings by Le Corbusier are to be added to the World Heritage List, Monocle 24's Section D speaks to a number of organisations—including the Twentieth Century Society, devotees of Frank Lloyd Wright in Arizona, London's Victoria Albert Museum, and the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian in New York City—in order to understand why architectural preservation is important, and who decides what’s worth saving.

Monocle 24 Ask: Why is Architectural Preservation Important? - Featured Image

"The Archipreneur Concept": A Business Book That Brings Architecture Practice into the 21st Century

"The Archipreneur Concept": A Business Book That Brings Architecture Practice into the 21st Century  - Image 1 of 4
Selgas Cano's office in Madrid. Image © Iwan Baan

This review of "The Archipreneur Concept" by Tobias Maescher was originally published on Archsmarter as "The Archipreneur Concept: A Review."

When I started my business almost four years ago, I read every business book I could get my hands on. Apart from a paper route in grade school, I didn’t have a business background. I hadn’t even taken any business classes in college. But after seeing many hardworking colleagues get laid off during the 2009 recession, I realized I wanted to call my own shots and be my own boss.

Needless to say, I had some catching up to do.

So I went to the library and the book store and got a stack of books on marketing, sales, and business finance. You name it, I read it. The problem was that I couldn’t always put these books into a context that made sense to me. I didn’t want to run a Fortune 500 business. I didn’t have a marketing team. I didn’t even know if I wanted to hire employees. I just wanted work for myself and build something of my own.

All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics

Rio de Janeiro is a city of sights and sounds. As diverse as its people is the collection of impressive architecture found in Brazil’s second most populous city—from Eurocentric historical architecture to 20th century regionalist modern marvels, not to mention the city’s growing crop of contemporary cultural venues. The combination of mountainous terrain, lush rainforest, and the ocean inspires many to create lively and unique architecture.

In preparation for the 2016 Summer Olympics, the city has enlisted a crop of internationally renowned architects including Santiago Calatrava, whose work joins Rio's existing masterpieces from architects such as Oscar Niemeyer. But apart from its "Capital A" Architecture, the city of Rio is home to thousands of residents living in the now-famous favelas—interesting subjects of inquiry for those interested in the concept of spontaneous urban growth. There’s a building for just about every architecture fan visiting Rio this year or anytime in the future.

All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 1 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 2 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 3 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 4 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 5 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 6 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 7 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 8 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - Image 9 of 4All The Architecture To See in Rio de Janeiro During the 2016 Olympics - More Images+ 15

Marlon Blackwell On Working in Arkansas and Why We Should "Recreate Strangeness" in Architecture

In this video entitled Building Between, Marlon Blackwell advocates for a kind of regionalism which isn’t as divisive as “regionalism.” As a 24-year resident of Arkansas, he recalls his work and process in a place which he states is both “an environment of natural beauty and a place of real constructed ugliness”—showing the nuanced and self-critical awareness of place beyond the utopian glorification of genius loci which earlier this year earned him the 2016 Cooper Hewitt National Design Award in Architecture.

Marlon Blackwell On Working in Arkansas and Why We Should "Recreate Strangeness" in Architecture - Image 1 of 4Marlon Blackwell On Working in Arkansas and Why We Should "Recreate Strangeness" in Architecture - Image 2 of 4Marlon Blackwell On Working in Arkansas and Why We Should "Recreate Strangeness" in Architecture - Image 3 of 4Marlon Blackwell On Working in Arkansas and Why We Should "Recreate Strangeness" in Architecture - Featured ImageMarlon Blackwell On Working in Arkansas and Why We Should Recreate Strangeness in Architecture - More Images

Material Focus: Enseada House by Arquitetura Nacional

This article is part of our new "Material Focus" series, which asks architects to elaborate on the thought process behind their material choices and sheds light on the steps required to get buildings actually built.

The Enseada House project was developed by the Porto Alegre office of National Architecture in 2015 and is 317 square meters with an interesting interplay between volume and materials. We talked with the architect Paula Otto, one of the designers to learn more about the material choices used in this project and the role that these choices played in the design concept.

Material Focus: Enseada House by Arquitetura Nacional - Image 1 of 4Material Focus: Enseada House by Arquitetura Nacional - Image 2 of 4Material Focus: Enseada House by Arquitetura Nacional - Image 3 of 4Material Focus: Enseada House by Arquitetura Nacional - Image 4 of 4Material Focus: Enseada House by Arquitetura Nacional - More Images+ 18

Roberto Burle Marx: A Master of Much More than Just Modernist Landscape

This article was originally published by Metropolis Magazine as "Green Thumb."

At any given moment when walking through Roberto Burle Marx: Brazilian Modernist at the Jewish Museum in New York, one may hear a soft rushing of waves, mixed with the murmur of an open-air crowd. A narration in Portuguese, both spoken and sung, will drift breezily in and out. This is the soundscape of Plages, a 2001 video by artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster. Shot from an aerial perspective above Copacabana Beach, the film shows the popular Rio de Janeiro waterfront not in its usual sunlit splendor but in the artificially lit nocturne of New Year’s Eve 2000. Celebrators teem in the space between city and ocean, in the moment between one year and the next, moving in dynamic patterns amid the immense designs laid out by Roberto Burle Marx.

Roberto Burle Marx: A Master of Much More than Just Modernist Landscape - Image 1 of 4Roberto Burle Marx: A Master of Much More than Just Modernist Landscape - Image 2 of 4Roberto Burle Marx: A Master of Much More than Just Modernist Landscape - Image 3 of 4Roberto Burle Marx: A Master of Much More than Just Modernist Landscape - Image 4 of 4Roberto Burle Marx: A Master of Much More than Just Modernist Landscape - More Images+ 6

Video: Pierre Bélanger Explains "EXTRACTION", the Canadian Contribution to the 2016 Venice Biennale

In this interview, presented in collaboration with PLANE—SITE, Pierre Bélanger, curator of the Canadian contribution to the 2016 Venice Biennale—explains why Canada's practices of mining and extraction should be carefully understood for their architectural implications. Together with his firm OPSYS, Bélanger conceived of a miniaturized experience of an "inverted territorial intervention" so that Biennale visitors could personally experience and relate to "the complex ecologies and vast geopolitics of resource extraction."

A Virtual Look Into A. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons' Case Study House #24

As A Quincy Jones rightly said, “There’s no unimportant architecture”.[1] The late architect worked alongside his colleague, Frederick E. Emmons, putting their hearts and souls into the design of Case Study House #24, but sadly it was never built. The location in which Case Study House #24 was to be constructed was once a part of the Rolling Hills Ranch, the area which is now popularly known as San Fernando Valley.

The design of the house started with the surrounding environment, which is richly brought out in the architectural drawings by the architects. The region with its lush green vegetation invites swimming, barbecuing, horse riding and other such outdoor activities.

A Virtual Look Into A. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons' Case Study House #24 - Image 1 of 4A Virtual Look Into A. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons' Case Study House #24 - Image 2 of 4A Virtual Look Into A. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons' Case Study House #24 - Image 3 of 4A Virtual Look Into A. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons' Case Study House #24 - Image 4 of 4A Virtual Look Into A. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons' Case Study House #24 - More Images+ 3

18 Useful Research Resources for Architects Online

For those of us that aren’t based out of a university—and even for many who are—finding research resources that cover the topic you're interested in can be a challenge. But they can be found, and thanks to the internet your search no longer needs to be limited to nearby libraries. In fact, many world-renowned libraries and magazines are now working to digitize important parts of their collection, while a number of online organizations have sprung up with missions to improve access to information. To help you identify some of the most useful, we’ve put together a list of 18 free websites that offer scholarly articles, publications, photos, videos, and much more.

AD Classics: Bharat Bhavan / Charles Correa

In the late 1970s, the Government of India launched an initiative to build in every state capital an institution to celebrate the cultural and creative output of the nation. Although the scheme was largely unsuccessful, one shining example remains: Bharat Bhavan (‘India House’), located in Bhopal.

Designed by Indian architectural luminary Charles Correa, this multi-arts center first opened its doors in 1982. More than thirty years later, it continues to house a variety of cultural facilities and play host to multitude of arts events. The design of the complex is a product of Correa’s mission to establish a modern architectural style specific to India and distinct from European Modernism. Drawing on the plentiful source material provided by the rich architectural heritage of his home country, at Bharat Bhavan Correa produced a building for the modern era which manages to also remain firmly rooted in the vernacular traditions of India’s past.

AD Classics: Bharat Bhavan / Charles Correa - Cultural CenterAD Classics: Bharat Bhavan / Charles Correa - Exterior Photography, Cultural Center, Courtyard, Door, FacadeAD Classics: Bharat Bhavan / Charles Correa - Cultural CenterAD Classics: Bharat Bhavan / Charles Correa - Cultural CenterAD Classics: Bharat Bhavan / Charles Correa - More Images+ 45

Material Focus: Salling Tower by Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter

This article is part of our new "Material Focus" series, which asks architects to elaborate on the thought process behind their material choices and sheds light on the steps required to get buildings actually built.

Installed last year, the Salling Tower provides a striking, sculptural landmark in Aarhus Docklands. From inside, its deceptively simple counterbalanced form provides a range of ways to look out over the harbor and the city - but from the outside the project's designers, Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter wanted the tower to take on an abstract appearance, referencing nautical themes with its sail-like shape and porthole-like openings all while obscuring the process of its own construction. To do this, the firm created a structure composed entirely of a single steel piece resting on top of its foundations. In this interview, project architect Noel Wibrand tells us about how the project's material choice contributed to the construction process.

Material Focus: Salling Tower by Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter - Image 1 of 4Material Focus: Salling Tower by Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter - Image 2 of 4Material Focus: Salling Tower by Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter - Image 3 of 4Material Focus: Salling Tower by Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter - Image 4 of 4Material Focus: Salling Tower by Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter - More Images+ 3

HASSELL + OMA Reveal Design for New Museum for Western Australia

With the contract to design and build the museum in Perth officially awarded to contractor Brookfield Multiplex, HASSELL + OMA have revealed the design for the New Museum for Western Australia. The WA Government commissioned HASSEL + OMA to design the cultural institution in April of this year.

HASSELL Principal and Board Director Mark Loughnan, and OMA Managing Partner-Architect David Gianotten stated: “Our vision for the design was to create spaces that promote engagement and collaboration, responding to the needs of the Museum and the community. We want it to create a civic place for everyone, an interesting mix of heritage and contemporary architecture, that helps revitalize the Perth Cultural Centre while celebrating the culture of Western Australia on the world stage. The design is based on the intersection of a horizontal and vertical loop creating large possibilities of curatorial strategies for both temporary and fixed exhibitions.”

Places Journal Examines Post-Katrina Architecture in New Orleans

The damage caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 can never be forgotten, but 10 years after the rebuilding of New Orleans started in 2006, a new architecture has emerged with cutting-edge designs being widely celebrated in the media. The Make It Right foundation (founded after the disaster to help with structural recovery) commissioned first-class architects such as Morphosis, Shigeru Ban, and David Adjaye to design safe and sustainable houses for New Orleans’ Lower 9th Ward. But Richard Campanella and Cassidy Rosen worry that this vision is detached from reality.

Cubes, Spheres and Inverted Pyramids: 10 Groundbreaking Residential Projects

AD Classics are ArchDaily's continually updated collection of longer-form building studies of the world's most significant architectural projects. Here we've rounded-up ten groundbreaking residential projects from this collection, ranging from a 15th century Venetian palazzo to a three-dimensional axonometric projection. Although some appear a little strange, all have been realised and have made lasting contributions to the wider architectural discourse. You can study residential cubes, spheres and inverted pyramids—plus projects by the likes of OMA, Álvaro Siza, and Richard and Su Rogers—after the break.

Video: Calatrava’s Dubai Observation Tower Passes Wind Tunnel Testing

The Tower at Dubai Creek Harbour, Santiago Calatrava's competition-winning "landmark" residential and observation tower in Dubai, has passed through wind tunnel tests, confirming the structural strength of the project. When complete, the project will constitute the heart of a 6 square kilometer master-planned community set by the historic Dubai Creek and only 10 minutes from the Dubai International Airport.

Read more after the break and check out the visualization of the project above.

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.