Fast forward to the present, and home prices have not gone down but up, and people are still desperate to own one, making ...
Water’s absence has fostered urban instability, ecological collapse, and widespread water insecurity. The climate crisis is ...
Humans go to extreme effort to build things. The monumentality of the Pyramids, the complexity of Stonehenge, the glories of Rome—all of these are timeless manifestations of our fundamental need to ...
An artist’s politicized restoration at a medieval church sparks heated debate.
Parish priest Daniele Micheletti expressed exasperation at the “procession of people that came to see it instead of listening to mass or praying,” adding, “I don’t understand this fuss. Painters used ...
The name “Sunnyside” originated around 1710, when French Huguenots purchased the land and named it “Sunnyside Hill.” After ...
The 2025 numbers for Architecture Week suggest the momentum is real: participation by design professionals doubled to 505; firm involvement grew to 131 from 96; school programming expanded by 400%; ...
San Francisco, May 2022. Friday, 5:00 p.m. My first time visiting an American downtown. I had just landed, and my first instinct—having grown up walking, exploring, and working in European cities—was ...
Architecture critic Paul Goldberger is one of many who have raised their voices in alarm at the way President Trump is proposing to alter and add to the White House. There is much to agree with in his ...
Artificial intelligence is beginning to shape decisions about the physical environment in ways most people never see directly. Algorithms now assist in evaluating proposals, modeling infrastructure ...
Buildings have long memories. They are intimate witnesses to virtually all of our lives. And after those many decades of collective use, they have stories to tell. Especially the old ones. The Wyckoff ...