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Rikers Island: Territorial Empathy and Reimagining Civic Engagement

October 12, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

The NYC Civic Engagement Commission (CEC), Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA), the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City and Public Artist in Residence (PAIR) Yazmany Arboleda officially kicked off The People’s Festival. This five borough series of outdoor events featured live performances, interactive workshops, and community information and resources. The festival was anchored by The People’s Bus, a retired city bus formerly used to transport people detained on Rikers Island.

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HiLo NEST Research Building Takes Shape in Switzerland

October 7, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

The latest addition to Empa and Eawag’s NEST research building in Duebendorf, Switzerland has officially opened. The innovative HiLo unit illustrates nearly a decade of formative ETH Zurich research in architecture and sustainable technologies, and features an intricate, doubly curved concrete roof, lightweight funicular floors, and self-learning building technology.

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Lendager Group Designs for Disassembly in Milan

October 5, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Lendager Group was founded with the explicit goal of becoming the leading sustainable architectural office in Denmark. Exploring the concept of Design for Disassembly (DfD for short), their recent project in Milan is grounded in the growing concern around resource consumption and low recycling rates within the construction industry. Expanding on themes of the circular economy, their work was designed utilizing chairs made of ocean plastic and the pavilion was designed for disassembly.

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Los Angeles, Wildfires and Adaptive Design: Greg Kochanowski on Creating New Futures

September 16, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Great design is rooted in responsive and adaptive approaches. For architect and landscape architect Greg Kochanowski,  equitable design solutions should critical issues, such as climate and housing. As Partner and Design Principal at GGA, Greg an active researcher focusing on resilient environments that create synergies between natural systems, culture, infrastructure, and development.

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Intersectional Design: Rethinking Architecture for the Future

September 9, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Design stems from nuance, empathy and understanding. The best solutions address the needs, identities and context of a client and place. A designer’s response needs to be informed by these different realities. Intersectional Design is a method of designing by thinking through how factors of identity (gender, race, sexuality, class, and many more) interact with one other. In understanding how these factors combine, we can more deeply understand the context of use and an individual user’s priorities.

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Space Saloon Reimagines Okoboji Ecologies in Northwest Iowa

September 2, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Artist collective Space Saloon recently completed the inaugural Public Art and Ecology Artists-in-Residence in the Okoboji region of Northwest Iowa. Observing local landscapes and diverse ecosystems, the team created a series of temporary installations, site-specific sculptures and multi-species performances. Working in association with Imagine Iowa Great Lakes and the Iowa Lakeside Lab, the process led to a series of public events reimagining how to engage regional ecologies.

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Terracotta Arts: Ceramic Cladding in Museums and Cultural Centers

August 31, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Few materials are as timeless, durable and beautiful as terracotta. With a range of inherent properties, terracotta is being specified to redefine building envelopes. Used for its many colors and textures, as well as its flexibility, this ceramic can be constructed as cladding, rain screens and a variety of components. Dating back to the Babylonians, terracotta has been used throughout history, and it continues to be a material selected for diverse building types around the world.

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Outside the Box Office Design: Discover Istanbul’s New Workplaces

August 26, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Office buildings are known for being utilitarian, efficient, and rigid. While this typology has earned a reputation for adopting rectilinear grids and open layouts, modern designs have begun exploring new alternatives for the contemporary workplace. Moving beyond standard work rooms, meeting spaces, and support zones, these projects are reimagining the relationships between envelope and program. This is a larger movement towards rethinking the formal and spatial characteristics of where we work. While this trend is being explored globally, cities have begun embracing new office designs at a larger scale.

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Building Toronto: New Housing on the Rise in Canada’s Queen City

August 24, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

Canada’s Queen City has become renowned for its housing boom. As the most populous location in the country, Toronto is also one of the world’s hottest luxury real estate markets. An hub for arts, business, and media, the city is sited on a sloping plateau with a unique ravine system. While it boasts incredible architecture and high-end designs, Toronto risks a housing correction. Rapid increases in home prices, overvaluation, and overbuilding have all attributed to the city’s mounting situation. Amidst these unstable conditions and uncertainty, new residential projects continue to be built.

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Industrial Nouveau: Dramatic Renovation Projects Reimagining Urban Life

August 19, 2021 Eric Baldwin 0

No building stands in isolation. Engaging environmental and cultural networks, architecture is an inherently grounded art. As such, limits, constraints, and restrictions drive the design process forward, engendering solutions which celebrate the world as we find it. Embodying this dynamic, renovations and adaptive reuse projects embrace challenging problems and existing conditions. This is especially true when working with industrial buildings, places where machinery, manufacturing, and power combine.