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Harvard Graduate School of Design is expanding a travelling fellowship previously reserved just for alumni by making it available to any early-career architect in the world who wants to do research abroad.
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Morning Roundup: December 21, 2012
Architecture gags past and present on "The Simpsons," a new church for Chicago's historic Michigan Avenue by Gensler, plus other architecture news from all around.
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Architecture gags past and present on "The Simpsons," a new church for Chicago's historic Michigan Avenue by Gensler, plus other architecture news from all around.
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Bjarke Ingels is architecture's chief bro, Zaha Hadid gives a holiday gift to Michigan State University, and more architecture news from all around.
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The Association for Robots in Architecture, which is hosting a robot architecture conference in Vienna today, is not facilitating a robot uprising—yet. In Midtown, a different kind of uprising is taking place: Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture is planning a skyscraper taller than the Empire...
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Bing Thom celebrates his birthday by winning his dream commission (an opera house), shortlisted firms for M+ in Hong Kong announced, and Sarah Williams Goldhagen doubts Oscar Niemeyer's legacy is everything that everyone says it is.
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Robert Greenstreet, Intl. Assoc. AIA, is the 2013 Topaz Medallion for Excellence in Architectural Education winner, while John D. Anderson, FAIA, has won the Edward C. Kemper Award for Service to the Profession.
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The Tijuana architect arrested for smuggling cocaine over the U.S. border receives a light sentence, the Louvre Lens Museum opens in France, and The Atlantic looks at a new way of recording buildings in time and space.
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Populous will design another World Cup 2018 stadium for Russia, a Tijuana architect gets sentenced for smuggling cocaine (!), and a sci-fi brand remembers Oscar Niemeyer, plus architecture news from Virginia, Germany, and beyond.
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Herzog & de Meuron wants to cure Miami of its vices, The Atlantic think that construction productivity is to blame for failing construction jobs, and Elke Kramer borrows a page from Louis Kahn, plus architecture news from Las Vegas, Kazakhstan, and beyond.