-
Harry Weese’s D.C. Metro stations are in danger of insensitive renovation. If changes really are necessary, don’t these modern landmarks deserve the best?
-
April showers bring new hope for government investment in infrastructure and, if the gods are just, a belated Pritzker Prize for Denise Scott Brown.
-
Léon Krier has republished his controversial 1985 book on Albert Speer. In it, Krier attempts to reconcile his contempt for industrialization with his love of the Nazi architect's work.
-
Editor-in-chief Ned Cramer discusses how breaking down and buying a car, after years of not owning one, has provided him with new insights.
-
The current formula for obtaining an architecture license increasingly feels like a recipe for attrition. Has the profession finally arrived at a tipping point where reform is possible?
-
This year, skip the mall and go shopping for a worthy architecture cause instead.
-
With extreme weather becoming more and more common, the case for climate change is indisputable. Architects stand on the front line in the war against climate change and extreme weather.
-
The American Institute of Architects is engaging its members and the public in an important conversation about the future.
-
In light of Venturi stepping down at his eponymous firm, ARCHITECT editor-in-chief Ned Cramer discusses the importance of Venturi and Denise Scott Brown's work to both the professional and himself.
-
America is a great nation, but is it wise enough to learn from history and curb its own hubris?