Her garden transforms the front yard into an extension of the home and a welcoming space for social interaction. Through ...
This low-lying region, with its ever-shifting boundaries between water and land battered by relentless North Sea storms, ...
And yet, at an advanced age, when I should be acquiring other more compelling interests, I persist. I’m a huge sports fan: I ...
On the broader goal of economic justice, the chattering classes have been buzzing with the question of who Mayor Mamdani will ...
It’s hard to believe that it’s been five ye ars now since Pulitzer Prize–winning Blair Kamin left the Chicago Tribune after ...
Nearly 30 years ago, Nicholas Lemann wrote the first widely read book about the “Great Migration”—the movement between 1916 and 1970 of more than 6 million African Americans from poverty and ...
How did modern architecture happen? How did we evolve so quickly from architecture that had ornament and detail, to buildings that were often blank and devoid of detail? Why did the look and feel of ...
Every city needs someone to observe it, sketch it, master its history, and insist that its strengths be defended and reinforced. Sometimes the person who plays this role comes from the other side of ...
Building booms are a bit like pandemics: they begin slowly; variants cause mass infection, a scrambling response, and then, ultimately, exhaustion. As interest rates spike and the most recent boom ...
We are excited to announce the launch of a new monthly podcast, Our Buildings, Our Selves: Humanity in Architecture, produced by Common Edge, the Connecticut Architecture Foundation, the Connecticut ...
While many architects have long clung to the old “form follows function” adage, form follows brain function might be the motto of today’s advertisers and automakers, who increasingly use high-tech ...
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