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Venice Authorities Introduce Ticketing and Entry Fees to Solve Over-Tourism Crisis

July 14, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

Following several initiatives to tackle the tourism and architectural heritage crisis, Venice authorities have announced that as of January 16th, 2023, visitors will have to book a visiting slot and an entrance fee to see the historic canal city. The newly proposed ticketing system, which is claimed to be the first of its kind in the world, hopes to control its “over-tourism” crisis, a challenge that has been affecting the lagoon’s ecosystem, urban development, and local population.

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ARCH+ and Summacumfemmer Büro Juliane Greb Selected as Curators of the German Pavilion at the 2023 Venice Biennale

July 12, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

ARCH+ and Summacumfemmer Büro Juliane Greb have been selected to curate the German pavilion at the 18th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia for their concept Open for Maintenance / Wegen Umbau geöffnet. Commissioned by the German Federal Ministry of Housing, Urban Development and Building, the pavilion is set to demonstrate “the opportunities and potentials of future tasks to advance sustainable, social, and inclusive architecture and urban design”. The 18th International Architecture Exhibition will be held from May 20th until November 26th, 2023.

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Interiors of Today: 17 Projects that Show How Current Cities and Living Trends are Influencing Modern Interior Architecture

July 8, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

The past couple of decades introduced the world to new ways of living as a result of different social, economic, and ecological changes. Naturally, these changes found their way into the architecture and urban practice, provoking new concepts within traditional typologies. Designing a space, regardless of its function, has always prioritized users’ needs and ensured practicality and functionality, but recently, keywords like flexibility, privacy, inclusivity, and eco-consciousness have become driving forces behind design processes. In this interior focus, we will look at how current cities and living trends across the world have reshaped interior design and introduced modifications to typical typologies. 

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Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces “The Beauty of Impermanence” as its 2nd Edition Theme

July 8, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

Hoor Al Qasimi, the President of the Sharjah Architecture Triennial, and its curator Tosin Oshinowo, have announced the title and theme of the 2023 Triennial as “The Beauty of Impermanence: An Architecture of Adaptability”. The theme reflects on the issues of scarcity in the Global South, and how this challenge has created a “culture of re-use, re-appropriation, innovation, collaboration and adaptation”. Through these differing modes of practice, the event, which will be inaugurated in November 2023, will explore how people can “reorient global conversations to create a more sustainable, resilient, and equitable future”.

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Foster + Partners Completes National Bank of Kuwait Headquarters in Kuwait City

July 7, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

Foster + Partners has completed the new headquarters for the National Bank of Kuwait, a 300-meter skyscraper with a distinctive presence among the buildings of Sharq, Kuwait city’s growing financial district. The new tower promotes employee synergy and enhanced wellbeing by bringing all of the bank’s corporate employees together under one roof. The design combines environmentally-conscious features and structural innovation, providing an energy-efficient passive architecture that shields the offices from the extremes of Kuwait’s climate.

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Annabel Karim Kassar’s Installation at the V&A Museum in London Explores the Reconstruction of Beirut’s Architecture

July 6, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

As part of the London Festival of Architecture, French-Lebanese architect Annabel Karim Kassar and her award-winning studio AKK have unveiled a new installation at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London titled The Lebanese House: Saving a home, Saving a city. The installation explores the aftermaths of the Beirut explosion, and the rebuilding of the city with a life-size replica of a typical Lebanese home, one of the few remaining classic Ottoman-Venetian houses left in old Beirut, along with documentary films.

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Aedas Unveils the Design of the Hangzhou Yun He Wan International Tourism and Leisure Complex in China

July 5, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

Aedas has unveiled the design of the Hangzhou Yun He Wan International Tourism and Leisure Complex in Hangzhou, China. Located in the southern area of the Grand Canal New Town in the Gongshu District of Hangzhou, the site is the first phase of a larger project, starting off as a vibrant international tourism and leisure complex that highlights the waterfront of Yun He Wan and the historical remains of the nearby industrial pier.

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Drozdov & Partners is Transforming Schools into Temporary Shelters for Internally Displaced People in Ukraine

July 4, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

One of the most urgent problems faced by Ukrainians today is the unsettled situation faced by displaced citizens, along with the challenge of returning to the cities they were forced to abandon earlier this year. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has shared that efforts to rebuild Ukraine will require ‘colossal investments’, and as leaders gather to work out ‘Marshall plan’ to rebuild the country, local architects have already begun developing emergency housing, healthcare, and educational facilities in cities further away from the Russian border.

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An Environmental Youth Center in Mount Lebanon and a Modular School in Ukraine: 8 Educational Facilities Submitted to ArchDaily

July 1, 2022 Dima Stouhi 0

This week’s curated selection of Best Unbuilt Architecture highlights educational facilities submitted by the ArchDaily community. From a contextual Earth school in Senegal, to a borderless, collaborative school in Vietnam, this round up of unbuilt projects showcases how architects infused nature with architecture, offering students the chance to engage with the landscape and learn more about their surroundings from their academic institutes. The article also features projects from Lebanon, Switzerland, Armenia, Ukraine, and Greece.