Making It Happen: New Community Architecture
Well-meaning architecture doesn’t have to be ugly is the welcome message behind the latest exhibition at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).
Well-meaning architecture doesn’t have to be ugly is the welcome message behind the latest exhibition at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).
Architecture Itself and Other Postmodernist Myths proposes a counter-reading of postmodern procedures, replacing the myth of the autonomous architect with accounts of empirically describable architectural activity.
Featuring 40 projects that explore salient topics around the future of mobility and the urban environment, the exhibition will be punctuated with six provocations and a selection of design responses that reimagine livable streets and the way people, goods and services will move in a new age of connected and transformational mobility.
This exhibition features the research of the Just City Lab at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, examining five design and planning cases in New York City.
The District Architecture Center is pleased to host Transforming Cities, Transforming Lives: The Aga Khan Historic Cities Programme, an exhibition of 27 regeneration projects from nine countries that demonstrate how culture can have a positive impact well beyond conservation.
Prague Tomorrow? is a series of exhibitions at CAMP that provide visitors an overview of new construction projects that - if realized - will sinificantly change teh face of Prague.
An exhibition of previously unseen drawings, sketches and renderings highlighting a fascinating chapter in the architect’s dynamic and productive architectural career.
MSA MSA is a Brussels based office involved in many kinds of projects, from the design of public space to the elaboration of masterplan for larger territories.
Secret Cities examines the innovative design and construction of Oak Ridge, Hanford, and Los Alamos, tracing their precedents in the Bauhaus and other early modern schools of architectural thought.
Victor Alfred Lundy was educated in both the Beaux-Arts and Bauhaus schools of architecture - separated by his service in WWII - before he started his firm in Sarasota, Florida. He later moved to New York City. He also practiced in both Houston and Dallas, Texas while teaching.