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Breaking

Monacelli's 'Shingle and Stone: Tom Kligerman Houses'

Stuart Grannen, Patron Saint of the High-End Artifact

In Texas Hill Country, the Albert Hotel by Clayton Korte

Redfin: What to Know About New Mexico Architecture

In Brooklyn, Designs by Swiss-Influenced Studio Seitz

Winners in the 2022 George Matsumoto Competition

From Bellevue, Washington: Interiors by Anna Popov

'Morocco: Destination of Style, Elegance and Design'

'Midnight in Paris' at Omaha's Cottonwood Hotel

How to Save 25% on a Renovation by Daniel Frisch

New Ravenna Adds Five Muted Mosaics to its Studio Line

At the Chrysler Museum, an Exhibition of Modern Prints

At Dartmouth, a New Strategic Framework on Campus

Magritte: Barovier&Toso's Surrealist Lighting Collection

In the Andes, a Weekend Escape Turned Permanent Home

From Spain Unspoilt: Custom-Designed, Guided Tours

After a Two-Year Wait, a Pilgrimage to Basque Country

A Collaboration with Barovier&Toso and Luca Nichetto

Joseph Giovannini's Century of Disruptive Avant-Garde

From Rizzoli, Joseph Giovannini's 'Architecture Unbound'

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  • Monacelli's 'Shingle and Stone: Tom Kligerman Houses'

    Tom Kligerman’s self-described “New American” architecture is being chronicled in a new book from The Monacelli Press. “Shingle and Stone: Tom Kligerman Houses” covers...
    Read Full Story
  • Stuart Grannen, Patron Saint of the High-End Artifact

    Educated by his early-American-furniture-loving parents, Stuart Grannen bought his first piece of stained glass at age seven. “As a kid, they dragged me to places like the Metropolitan...
    Read Full Story
  • In Texas Hill Country, the Albert Hotel by Clayton Korte

    The town of Fredericksburg, Texas – smack-dab in the middle of Hill Country – is undergoing a transformation. Located where the 19th-century Goodnight-Loving Cattle Trail once...
    Read Full Story
  • Redfin: What to Know About New Mexico Architecture

    I was asked recently by the blog editor at Redfin, the Seattle-based reals estate brokerage firm, for a few words on the pueblo architecture of New Mexico. I obliged, because I’ve...
    Read Full Story
  • In Brooklyn, Designs by Swiss-Influenced Studio Seitz

    If the fine furnishings created by Studio Seitz look like they’ve been made with Swiss precision, that’s because they are. Co-founders Kevin Seitz and Rob van Wyen are inspired...
    Read Full Story
  • Winners in the 2022 George Matsumoto Competition

    The votes are in from the public for the 2022 Matsumoto Prize from North Carolina Modernist Houses - and the jury was unanimous in its first-place choice. The Domeck Residence in Chapel...
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  • From Bellevue, Washington: Interiors by Anna Popov

    Born in Moldavia - and educated with dual degrees in business and interior design from Israeli and Canadian universities – Anna Popov moved to the states nine years ago. She established...
    Read Full Story
  • 'Morocco: Destination of Style, Elegance and Design'

    Catherine Scotto is the author of a new book from Prestel and Rizzoli called “Morocco: Destination of Style, Elegance and Design. She’s the former editor-in-chief at Elle Décoration,...
    Read Full Story
  • 'Midnight in Paris' at Omaha's Cottonwood Hotel

    The interior demolition of what’s now the Kimpton Cottonwood Hotel in Omaha, Neb. yielded a treasure trove of early 19th-century finishes. The hotel started out as the Blackstone...
    Read Full Story
  • How to Save 25% on a Renovation by Daniel Frisch

    Born in 2012 after Hurricane Sandy - and at the tail end of the 2008 financial crisis - architect Daniel Frisch’s studio program for renovations is a model in resilience. “Most...
    Read Full Story
  • New Ravenna Adds Five Muted Mosaics to its Studio Line

    A competitive advantage of centralizing design, sales, and production into one facility is the ability to spot trends – and react – quickly. That’s one lesson learned from...
    Read Full Story
  • At the Chrysler Museum, an Exhibition of Modern Prints

    A selection of 45 modern prints by postwar artists is now on exhibit at the Chrysler Museum in Norfolk, Va. Lasting Impressions: Prints from the Collection of David R. and Susan...
    Read Full Story
  • At Dartmouth, a New Strategic Framework on Campus

    How does an architecture/planning firm design a strategic framework for a college that’s more than 250 years old – and already completely integrated into a New England town? The...
    Read Full Story
  • Magritte: Barovier&Toso's Surrealist Lighting Collection

    “Banish the already seen from the mind and seek the unseen” is one famous motto from the revolutionary painter René Magritte. He’s often considered to be one of the fathers of Surrealism...
    Read Full Story
  • In the Andes, a Weekend Escape Turned Permanent Home

    Metropolis magazine recently featured an article I penned about a home in the Andes Mountains of Ecuador designed by a pair of SCI-Arc graduates who now live and practice architecture...
    Read Full Story
  • From Spain Unspoilt: Custom-Designed, Guided Tours

    Those who’ve followed A+A on Instagram, Facebook, Linkedin and our own site recently know that we’ve spent two memorable weeks in Spain. Our travels were arranged through Spain...
    Read Full Story
  • After a Two-Year Wait, a Pilgrimage to Basque Country

    After a pandemic, a lockdown, a second pandemic, two vaccinations and two more boosters, we decided it was time for our long-delayed trip to Spain. Via American Airlines - and a much-deserved...
    Read Full Story
  • A Collaboration with Barovier&Toso and Luca Nichetto

    For more than 700 years, Murano-based Barovier&Toso has focused its artistic efforts on safeguarding the art of glass. The company recently collaborated with Luca Nichetto of Nichetto...
    Read Full Story
  • Joseph Giovannini's Century of Disruptive Avant-Garde

    Joseph Giovannini is a practicing architect who’s written about architecture and design for more than 30 years as a critic for major newspapers and magazines, coast-to-coast. He has a new book...
    Read Full Story
  • From Rizzoli, Joseph Giovannini's 'Architecture Unbound'

    Joseph Giovannini is a practicing architect who's written about architecture and design for more than 30 years as a critic for major newspapers and magazines coast to coast. He has a new book...
    Read Full Story
  • A Chapel Hill Addition by Louis Cherry and Arrowhead

    We are fortunate to have engaged the design services of Raleigh architect Jacob Burke for a recent addition to our home in this area. Jacob is a graduate of the N.C. State College of Design,...
    Read Full Story
  • In Durham, N.C., the Burch by Arrowhead Design/Build

    We are fortunate to have engaged the design services of Raleigh architect Jacob Burke for a recent addition to our home in this area. Jacob is a graduate of the N.C. State College of Design,...
    Read Full Story
  • In Maine, Caleb Johnson Studio Brands Cannabis Facilities

    Once the Maine legislature passed a referendum legalizing adult use of Cannabis in 2018, a company known as Seaweed approached Caleb Johnson Studio in Portland. They wanted to create...
    Read Full Story
  • In Bentonville, the Home Building by Eskew Dumez Ripple

    For the Home Building on the Thaden School campus in Bentonville, Ark., architects at Eskew Dumez Ripple designed a building that explores the pedagogy of food. They created a 34,000-square-foot...
    Read Full Story
  • Part II: Radical Practice: Marlon Blackwell Architects

    Marlon Blackwell has a new monograph out from Princeton Architectural Press, called “Radical Practice: The Work of Marlon Blackwell Architects.” Within its 510 pages are 13 projects...
    Read Full Story
  • Radical Practice: The Work of Marlon Blackwell Architects

    Marlon Blackwell has a new monograph out from Princeton Architectural Press. It’s called “Radical Practice: The Work of Marlon Blackwell Architects,” and within its 510 pages...
    Read Full Story
  • A Modern Tasting Room for Alton Wines in Walla Walla

    Not too long ago, I penned a feature article for Metropolis magazine about a wine tasting room out in the middle of a field of barley not far from Walla Walla, Wash. Born during the pandemic,...
    Read Full Story
  • In Metropolis Mag, Woodinville Whiskey by Graham Baba

    Back on February 23, Metropolis magazine ran an online feature I wrote about the design of a complex of three buildings by Seattle’s Graham Baba Architects for award-winning Woodinville...
    Read Full Story
  • 'Never Too Small' Reimagines Living in Tiny Spaces

    Colin Chee lives in a 38-square-meter apartment in inner city Melbourne and is constantly looking for inspiration and ideas on how to improve his small home. In 2017 he started making...
    Read Full Story
  • Jan Hartman and 'The Women Who Changed Architecture'

    Princeton Architectural Press editor Jan Hartman was running a Google search not long ago, looking for a book idea on collective architecture. She wondered: Should it be architects...
    Read Full Story
  • The Kiddo Collection, for a Jolt of Joy from New Ravenna

    New Ravenna’s Heyday Edition for the Kiddo Collection is aptly named. It was born during the pandemic when creative director Cean Irminger found herself at home with two daughters,...
    Read Full Story
  • Architect/Artist Karlyn Sutherland at Heller Gallery in NYC

    Architect and artist Karlyn Sutherland discovered the power and magic of the hand sketch at an early age. “In high school I always enjoyed drawing – hand drawings to represent...
    Read Full Story
  • 'Midnight in Paris' at Omaha's Cottonwood Hotel

    The interior demolition of what’s now the Kimpton Cottonwood Hotel in Omaha, Neb. yielded a treasure trove of early 20th-century finishes. The hotel started out as the Blackstone...
    Read Full Story
  • In Brooklyn, Designs by Swiss-Influenced Studio Seitz

    If the fine furnishings created by Studio Seitz look like they’ve been made with Swiss precision, that’s because they are. Co-founders Kevin Seitz and Rob van Wyen are inspired...
    Read Full Story
  • How to Build Better Cities and Ballparks: John Kirk

    A city’s ballpark, football field, or basketball stadium is akin to an anchor in a shopping mall, architect John Kirk contends. “If Nordstrom wasn’t there, the little retailers...
    Read Full Story
  • At Biltmore House, Restoring Two Paintings by Monet

    Durham, N.C.-based art conservator Ruth Barach Cox has a rich background in restoration work. She started in high school in Princeton, N.J., working on a collection of earthenware...
    Read Full Story
  • Webinar: 'Imperfect Utopia: A Park for the New World'

    A once-controversial, now-celebrated master plan for the North Carolina Museum of Art will be the topic of an online webinar at noon on Thursday, June 9. Architects Laurie Hawkinson...
    Read Full Story
  • Newsweek's Full List of NRA-Funded Republican Senators

    “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty...
    Read Full Story
  • Two Centuries of Maine Artists, Their Homes, and Studios

    Walter Smalling is an architectural photographer whose work spans the last four decades. He got his start – after studying architecture at U.Va., then graphic design at the University...
    Read Full Story
  • Gramercy Design in the West Village, by Kyle O'Donnell

    For designer Kyle O’Donnell, every project is a case study. “I don’t limit myself to one style or design,” the founder of Gramercy Design says. “I believe the project should...
    Read Full Story
  • At Club Ki’ama Bahamas, Totally Sustainable Residences

    On a small island not far from George Town in the Bahamas, Victor Barrett is planning a 100-percent sustainable development. Only 18 percent of its land will be developed, the rest...
    Read Full Story
  • CLB's 'FILTER' for Design Pavilion at NYCxDesign Festival

    From May 5-12, Jackson, Wyoming-based CLB Architects took center stage at New York's Times Square. They did it with a newly fabricated, non-denominational chapel with a tree at its center,...
    Read Full Story
  • In Wyoming, Interiors by WRJ Design's Rush Jenkins

    On the outside, a new two-bedroom guest house in Wilson, Wyoming looks as though it’s been on site forever. Inside, it’s modern and up-to-date, thanks to interiors by Rush Jenkins...
    Read Full Story
  • At SUSDESIGN Design Studio, Working with CORQUE

    SUSDESIGN Design Studio & Consultancy was founded by Ana Mestre in 2005, and focuses on sustainability-related activities: Sustainable interior and product design, research, education,...
    Read Full Story
  • At the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, 'At First Light'

    Sure, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art’s exhibition that celebrates the bicentennial of Maine’s statehood is two years late, but piffle! The museum had good reason. The late...
    Read Full Story
  • Castle Black at Sea Ranch, by Klopf Architecture

    Simple geometry is the theme of a new home that a San Francisco-based couple created for themselves at Northern California’s Sea Ranch. “There’s a diagonal gable from corner...
    Read Full Story
  • Andre Kikoski Does Lowcountry in Ponte Vedra Beach

    To design a pair of homes on a tidal marsh in Florida’s Ponte Vedra Beach, architect Andre Kikoski did what he’d done for projects in the Hamptons, Sag Harbor, and the Guggenheim...
    Read Full Story
  • Arup Wins National Building Museum's 2022 Honor Award

    Sustainability pays off. Surely that’s the case for Arup, the global built environmental firm that’s dedicated to the concept. “Our firm is built around sustainability – it’s...
    Read Full Story
  • John Kirk: How to Design Better Ballparks - and Cities

    A city’s ballpark, football field, or basketball stadium is akin to an anchor in a shopping mall, architect John Kirk contends. “If Nordstrom wasn’t there, the little retailers...
    Read Full Story
  • 'Bamboo Contemporary,' from Bill Richards and PA Press

    Author, editor, and strategic communications consultant Bill Richards has a new book out that tackles one of our favorite building materials: Bamboo. He began with 200 projects...
    Read Full Story

Bing Thom: Dissolving Boundaries

Today we will discuss the importance of architecture as craft. Bing Thom asserts that once there was a time...

July 25, 2011
1 Comment

Thinking through Our Return to the City

Gustafson Guthrie Nichol is an 11-year-old landscape architecture  firm – and winner of the prestigious...

July 8, 2011
1 Comment

Jim Olson: An Architect for Art

The architect who’s left  the Northwest with an abiding legacy of buildings that combine art, nature...

July 7, 2011
0 Comment

New Uses for Old Waterways

If the concept of inserting a swimming pool into the waters surrounding lower Manhattan seems somewhat...

July 5, 2011
0 Comment

In Syracuse, Flexibility for the Future

Some architects work toward contextual conformity.  Pam Campbell works toward flexibility for use, user...

July 1, 2011
0 Comment

Works in Stone from Giovanni Barbieri

Giovanni Barbieri has been working in his family’s Italian stone business since 1975, when he was 14 years...

June 30, 2011
7 Comments

Inspired by Usonia in Sagaponack

Henry Smith-Miller grew up in the village of Mount Kisco in Westchester County, N.Y., near Frank Lloyd...

June 24, 2011
0 Comment

Tour FIRST, Tallest Building in Paris

On a site in Paris near the Neuilly Bridge, aligned with the Louvre and the Arc de Triomphe, stands the tallest...

June 23, 2011
2 Comments

In Miami, Gehry’s New World Center

In South Beach, Jennifer May, a project manager for Italian furniture manufacturer Poltrona Frau, has completed...

June 21, 2011
0 Comment

At Harvard, Splendor on the Grass

By Frank Harmon, FAIA I recently attended my daughter Laura’s graduation at Harvard University,...

June 20, 2011
2 Comments


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