Gallerist Max Protetch and Museum Director Irene Hofmann fill their Santa Fe home with art
Published in DeparturesFollowing Passive House standards is meant to reduce the amount of energy needed to operate a building. But some of the requirements -- triple-glazed windows, thick layers of insulation -- increase the building's embodied energy. And in some cases the result is a building that emits more, not less, carbon than it would have without Passive House features.
Published in Architectural RecordA country of candy-colored architecture. Who knew? (Oliver Wainwright did.)
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Fourteen years after founding their experimental practice, the architects of SO–IL hit their stride
Published in Architectural DigestAnd What's Next for These Hometown Heroes?
Published in Architectural DigestOMA's design seems to hit all its marks
Published in Architectural DigestFollowing the lead of Tadao Ando, architects raise pouring concrete to an art form
Published in Interior DesignOnly one of them can be "the greenest office building in the world"
Published in Architectural DigestThe gentle architecture of Phase Three
Published in Architectural RecordSome buildings just couldn't be saved
Published in The New York TimesA roundtable of experts on making existing houses greener
Published in Metropolitan HomeThere's evidence that the size of new homes in America has peaked
Published in The New York TimesGustavo Bonevardi in the West Village
Published in The New York TimesSam Davol, the cellist for the Magnetic Fields, and his wife, Leslie, move north
Published in The New York TimesVisiting Paul Rudolph's Buildings in New England
Published in The New York TimesGorgeous interiors, up (under) the roof
Published in The New York TimesAt home with Ann Brashares and Jacob Collins
Published in The New York TimesWhy Barbara Hill is one of my favorite designers, ever
Published in The New York TimesVisting the Rural Studio's buildings in Alabama is one of the world's great architecture pilgrimages
Published in The New York TimesThe difficulties of saving New Canaan's modernist architecture
Published in MetropolisHow Robert Hammond and Joshua David Saved the Elevated Railway
Published in SurfaceThe Yale University Art Gallery gets an extensive, but faithful, renovation
Published in The New York Times45 years after his death, three buildings by Wright are in the works
Published in The New York TimesA world's fair pavilion costs less than an Apache helicopter -- and Shanghai 2010 is approaching
Published in ArchitectureCan Bernard Tschumi's New Acropolis Museum settle a score?
Published in The New York TimesA profile of artist and memorial designer MAYA LIN
Published in BlueprintSantiago Calatrava's opera house at Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands is dominated by a winglike canopy nearly 200 feet tall.
Published in The New York TimesProfile of Reed Kroloff, an advisor to architecture competitions.
Published in The New York TimesAn endangered species at the National Parks: modernist architecture
Published in ArchitectureA magical new building in SoHo
Published in The Independent on Sunday (London)The badly damaged 1993 exterior of the Storefront for Art and Architecture in Lower Manhattan, by Steve Holl and Vito Acconci, will be restored
Published in The New York TimesThe architect was awarded a Pulitzer Prize last month for her investigative work
Published in Architectural RecordWhat if New York City treated Barry Diller's $120 million park as an experiment, but not a monument?
Published in Architectural RecordSince it opened in 1995, Bruder has been able to bring the building into the 21st century without compromising his architectural vision, of which flexibility was a key part
Published in Architectural RecordIn 2014, after accepting the inaugural Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize from the Illinois Institute of Technology, Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron drove from Chicago to Plano, Illinois, to visit -- and criticize -- Mies van der Rohe’s iconic Farnsworth House
Published in Architectural RecordPaul Andreu's mammoth 'Egg' shelters three theaters under one domed roof
Published in Architectural RecordA Memphis architect draws on decades of experience to build what, by one measure, is the world's first zero-energy, zero-carbon home. [Nofe: I wrote the article but I don't agree with that measure. In reality, there is no such thing as a zero-energy or zero-carbon home.]
Published in DwellA boutique hotel among the quaint and the conventional
Published in Metropolitan HomeA longtime Jaffe admirer updates his house in Jaffe's Sam's Creek enclave
Published in Metropolitan HomeArchitecturally ambitous, it's also a model of international cooperation
Published in Architectural RecordFor Daniel Toole, a major commission while still in architecture school
Published in Architectural DigestThe project marks the nonagenarian architect's latest pro bono gig
Published in Architectural DigestThe saddest of American crimes evokes the best in American architetcture
Published in Architectural DigestArchitect Manuel Herz taps into a long history of kinetic architecture
Published in T Magazine (The New York Times)Can Frank Gehry's firm outlive its founder? Norman Foster's? Zaha Hadid's?
Published in Architectural RecordTechnologies that are changing how architects practice
Published in Architectural RecordInternal competition is one of several successul methods
Published in Interior DesignThis one's a gallery; that one's a publicly accessible private home
Published in Interior DesignThe importance of New York to architects' careers
Published in Interior DesignToshiko Mori's architectural dialogues with the masters
Published in The New York TimesA Paul Rudolph apartment, untouched for nearly 40 years
Published in The New York TimesA son designs a Costa Rica retreat for a literary dad
Published in The New York TimesLiving with century-old bricks and massive wooden trusses
Published in The New York TimesJennifer Luce's triumph in La Jolla
Published in The New York TimesAt home with the Ricky of Ricky's
Published in The New York TimesSyd Kitson's big deal
Published in The New York TimesTom Killian and Francoise Bollack keep their interventions subtle
Published in The New York TimesKulapat Yantrasast's Grand Rapids Art Museum has a light footprint
Published in The New York TimesWest Village resident Marianne Cusato designs Katrina Cottages
Published in The New York TimesEspecially if the church has already borrowed against the planned buildings
Published in The New York TimesA new house breaks with tradition
Published in The New York TimesThe apartment every celebrity needs
Published in The New York TimesMarty Skrelunas polishes Philip Johnson's masterpiece
Published in The New York TimesModernism arouses ire in the city's historic district
Published in The New York TimesDesigned for isolation, it's now surrounded
Published in The New York TimesExtraordinary ingenuity makes a tiny apartment seem spacious
Published in The New York TimesRon Witte and Sarah Whiting live in a modest, modernist masterpiece.
Published in The New York TimesSaving modernist houses
Published in The New York TimesThe Cretellas renovate
Published in The New York TimesSmall houses buck the McMansion trend
Published in The New York TimesReviving the shores of the Anacostia
Published in The New York TimesThe state of Philip Johnson's buildings
Published in The New York TimesInfrastrucutre gets a new look
Published in The New York TimesIn Santa Cruz, accessory dwelling units are encouraged
Published in The New York TimesAn apartment the world deserves to see
Published in Interior DesignWith a little help from its sponsors . . .
Published in The New York TimesFinally, someone's paying attention the New York State Pavilion at the 1964-65 World's Fair
Published in The New York TimesEndowments for the presidential libraries are coming up short
Published in The New York TimesThe Clinton library rises on the Arkansas River
Published in The New York TimesThe fight for photos of a Frank Lloyd Wright masterpiece
Published in The New York TimesPritzker Prize-winners compete.
Published in The New York TimesRem Koolhaas's relationship with New York is on the rocks
Published in The New York TimesA developer recreates Sunnyside (or tries to)
Published in The New York TimesA Review of Rem Koolhaas' new store in SoHo
Published in World ArchitectureEdwad Larrabee Barnes Visits Westchester
Published in The New York TimesIkea's plans for Westchester draw ire
Published in The New York TimesA portrait of the memorial designer as architect and artist
Published in The New York TimesMoving fabled galleries to a new building, while changing almost nothing
Published in The New York TimesWill Coop Himmelblau's "Open House" be realized?
Published in Metropolitan HomeBernard Tschumi shares his strategies for winning competitions
Published ArchitectThe Oklahoma-born architect built some of the great California houses of the 20th Century
Published in The Wall Street JournalHis descendant, architect Samuel White, leads the tour
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Not every gallery he designs is a plain white box
Published in ArtforumWhen the recession dried up a Texas couple’s credit sources, their architect realized that he had to build their modernist house himself.
Published in The New York TimesNext week, 19 groups of architecture students will serve meals at houses they built in Washington, part of the Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon.
Published in The New York TimesA booth for a Jewish festival
Published in The New York Times184 Markers for the Missing
Published in The New York TimesWith its new Journal, SOM critiques itself
Published in The New York TimesThe house is part of their collection
Published in The New York TimesDiller Scofidio + Renfro takes a crack at elevating Chinese workers
Published in Architectural RecordZumthor, Nouvel and much more
Published in The New York TimesA house in Memphis cuts it carbon footprint (albeit with offsets)
Published in DwellArticle on In Our Own Time: Modern Architecture in Litchfield, 1949-1970, show at Litchfield History Museum in Connecticut featuring more than dozen early modernist houses designed by Marcel Breuer, Richard Neutra, Edward Durrell Stone and others
Published in The New York TimesThe developers of a condo in Chelsea designed by Jean Nouvel are altering the building’s lobby after real estate agents attributed slow sales to the lobby’s design
Published in The New York TimesUndulating walls of stainless steel will ensure that few units at 8 Spruce Street, designed by Frank Gehry, will be identical
Published in The New York TimesDonald Trump’s project for a golf resort on the northeast coast of Scotland, near Aberdeen, hangs in the balance as environmentalists say the rugged coastline should be left undisturbed
Published in The New York TimesAn East-West collaboration upstate from Manhattan sheds light on a houseful of Chinese art
Published in T Magazine (The New York Times)The architect, who would have turned 100 this year, designed intricate brutalist structures that stand the test of time
Published in Galerie MagazineWrightwood 659’s ambitious program includes a reinstallation of the U.S. exhibition at the 2018 Venice Architecture Biennale
Published in Galerie MagazineThe last time Blake Trabulsi and Allison Orr had a party at their house in Austin, Texas, it lasted until 5 a.m. Observes Trabulsi: “People are so comfortable here, they never want to leave.”
Published in DwellFor Tad Beck, making a home out of a stolid, windowless warehouse meant opening it up from the inside out
Published in DwellKirsten Axelsen and David Carmel, who was paralyzed from the waist down in a diving accident eight years ago, live in a Chelsea apartment that is easy on the eyes and easy for David to get around
Published in DwellPublished in Dwell
When designer Barbara Hill decided to renovate her 1960s condo in Houston, Texas, she stripped the bathroom down to its bare bones and saw beauty in the blemishes
Published in DwellMost modernists find color as attractive as traditional Tudors. Fred Bernstein, a resolute lover of neutrals, attempts to expand his horizon of hues
Published in DwellThe right hand of the late starchitect, who has an iconoclastic streak all his own, now faces the daunting task of leading the firm she built
Anda Andrei has a slew of new hotel projects–and a chic New York City apartment. Take a tour here
At 27, she commissioned the Seagram Building. Now, a half-century later, Phyllis Lambert deconstructs its legacy in a new book
Bates Masi + Architects and David Kleinberg Design Associates create a contemporary family estate to be passed down to future generations
For their weekend home in Spain’s western countryside, the founders of SelgasCano pair preservation with innovation
Garry Winogrand, the renowned photographer of American life, once observed: “Photography is not about the thing photographed. It is about how that thing looks photographed.” A new show at the Parrish explores that theis.
Burning Man is many things -- including a model of smart city planning.
Published ArchitectIt took a lot of years to get it built. But Gehry stayed the course, compromised when necessary, and rose above his critics
Fred A. Bernstein tours the 2010 Shanghai World Expo, surveys its architectural hits and misses, and even gets inside the much-maligned U.S. pavilion
Published ArchitectArchitect Jonathan Segal prospers by serving as his own client, general contractor, and property manager
Published ArchitectThe new Las Vegas CityCenter was designed by a Rat Pack of star architects. Can their high-modern megaproject raise Sin City’s design standards?
Published ArchitectThe memorial design by landscape architects Dan Affleck and Ben Waldo offers a contemplative space in nature
Published in Architectural RecordIn a post-occupancy visit, Atelier Oslo and Lundhagem’s public library, which stayed open during Covid, is clearly a popular amenity
Published in Architectural RecordA new beachside building on Long Island embraces environmental stewardship
Published in Architectural RecordArchitect Joshua Ramus discusses the recently-completed exterior of the theater in Lower Manhattan that opens in 2023
Published in Architectural RecordReiser+Umemoto's Taipei Music Center is a brawny complex of cubic and crystalline forms
Published in Architectural RecordIn redesigning San Diego’s Mingei Museum, LUCE et Studio engages artists to further the institution’s mission
Published in Architectural RecordA wood temple on a sacred site opens and closes like a book
Published in Architectural RecordThe man behind the mega-dorm at the University of California, Santa Barbara, responds to criticism that it will create an unhealthy environment for students in rooms without windows
Published in Architectural RecordBaroque influences shape this sinuous contemporary church in Southern Italy by Mario Cucinella Architects
Published in Architectural RecordStill labeled Dubai 2020, the World Expo will open on October 1, complete with a centerpiece dome by Adrian Smith and Gordon Gill
Published in Architectural RecordProjects from around the country reflect an array of inventive affordable approaches
Published in Architectural RecordCompleted in 1962 and abandoned in 2001, Eero Saarinen’s bird-like building at JFK Airport in New York now serves as a spectacular lobby for the new hotel
Published in Architectural RecordThe 1,653-foot-high building will be part of a new Manhattan skyline that not everyone is happy about
Published in Architectural RecordThe architect talks to Record about the firm’s first, and biggest project, still incomplete, for Dissona
Published in Architectural RecordRichard Gluckman reimagines a Con Edison substation for Peter M. Brant’s latest art venue in New York
Published in Architectural RecordTo lead the profession, firms must nimbly respond to and embrace technological changes
Published in Architectural RecordSmiljan Radic's beacon-like regional theater in Chile is a concrete structure wrapped as lightly as a tent
Published in Architectural RecordTwo buildings open on a new campus in upper Manhattan, with a promise to enhance the community
Published in Architectural RecordThe longtime home of the Swiss National Museum, or Landesmuseum, in Zurich, is a stolid 19th-century pile
Published in Architectural RecordThree of the most eloquent voices at the Venice Architecture Biennale addressed different aspects of the same question: Can architecture improve lives in Africa?
Published in Architectural RecordIf you’re prominent and reach the age of 80, The New York Times may have a writer (possibly this one) prepare your obituary for later use
Published in Architectural RecordTwo teachers have been bringing out the inner architects in Moscow children since the Soviet era
Published in Architectural RecordIn Manhattan, a sleek rectilinear garage and sculptural salt shed brighten the city
Published in Architectural RecordMuseum of Arts and Design curator Lowery Stokes Sims made many great discoveries during her trips to 14 Central and South American countries
Published in Architectural RecordA dark and mysterious pavilion—the first new arrival in two decades—shakes up the Venice Biennale
Published in Architectural RecordBy running their fingers across new “super-high-definition smart tables," visitors make shapes that are then displayed as hats, lamps, tables, vases, chairs, or buildings
Published in Architectural RecordThis tightly packed world's fair of architectural hits and misses has no public transportation, a disaster for visitors who are elderly, disabled, or just tired.
Published in Architectural RecordAt an old distillery complex, Rem Koolhaas's Prada Foundation mixes one part creative preservation with one part bold new architecture
Published in Architectural RecordJoy's 1,000-square-foot station is part of the redevelopment of the southwest corner of the Princeton University campus
Published in Architectural RecordThe billionaire chats with RECORD about his Thomas Heatherwick-designed island, disagreeing with Frank Gehry, and why he hates Jean Nouvel's 100 Eleventh Avenue
Published in Architectural RecordJoshua Prince-Ramus discusses the challenges and opportunities of working abroad
Published in Architectural Record
Allied Works's Brad Cloepfil bravely tackles the redo for New York City's Museum of Arts and Design
Published in Architectural RecordWeeks before its grand opening, Safdie gives a behind-the-scenes tour of Alice Walton’s museum of American art
Published in Architectural RecordIn the Bronx, new parks are opening and old parks are being revitalized at a pace not seen since Robert Moses’s heyday.
Published in Architectural RecordAn aesthetic that mined the past gets a historical consideration of its own at a New York City symposium
Published in Architectural RecordA pavilion designed by Woods with Christoph A. Kumpusch is under construction in Chengdu, China. “I was never in love with drawing,” Woods says “I drew because I wanted to express ideas.”
Published in Architectural RecordFunding shortfalls could hinder ambitious waterfront schemes planned for several U.S. cities
Published in Architectural RecordDespite declining attendance and revenue, many cities are expanding convention centers or building new ones
Published in Architectural RecordWebsites are a vital marketing tool. Unless you’re a superstar design firm, steer clear of archi-speak and tricky graphics. Users want a site that is clean and simple.
Published in Architectural RecordWhen Jonathan Marvel and Rob Rogers founded Rogers Marvel Architects, they decided to forego the route taken by many of their peers—designing residential and commercial interiors—preferring, Marvel says, “to cut our teeth on New York City’s’ bricks and mortar.” And they have!
Published in Architectural RecordIt is as much of work of art as it is a museum of art.
Published in Architectural Record
Two architecturally ambitious developments have stalled following accusations of municipal malfeasance.
Published in Architectural RecordWhy is a Washington, D.C., rail revamp running on schedule while another in New York can’t even pull away from the platform?
Published in Architectural RecordUnder African Skies: The first phase of an ambitious national university creates a community of buildings and outdoor spaces adapted to a hot, dry climate
Published in Architectural Record
The renowned Spanish engineer and designer is the subject of an exhibition opening today at Russia's Hermitage Museum—the institution's first retrospective devoted to a contemporary architect. Calatrava speaks candidly with Architectural Record about the show, his work, and the criticism he often faces
Published in Architectural RecordThe new branch of the Louvre couldn't be more different from the museum's iconic Paris home
Published in Architectural RecordA new circulating library will be housed within the New York Public Library's main building on 42nd Street in Manhattan
Published in Architectural RecordAs it gathers material for its planned 2015 show of Latin American architecture from 1954 to 1980, Mexico alone warrants as much space as MoMA is likely to allot to the entire region
Published in Architectural RecordEight hundred people turned out for what was, in effect, a town hall meeting on the demolition of the Tod Williams Billie Tsien building
Published in Architectural RecordA competition challenged four architecture firms to come up with new ideas for Long Island downtowns.
Published in Architectural RecordPlans to protect Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House by placing it on a hydraulic lift to be deployed in case of flooding are proceeding at a rate that has surprised even the plans’ supporters
Published in Architectural RecordThe relationship between Le Corbusier and New York City involved love and hatred, passion and resentment, and ultimately a quest by the architect for “revenge, recognition, and money, money, money,” according to Jean-Louis Cohen
Published in Architectural RecordWhen Less is More Earth-friendly
Published in Architectural RecordWhen Frank Lloyd Wright’s SC Johnson Research Tower in Racine, Wisconsin, opens for tours for the first time in 60 years, visitors will see firsthand its functional shortcomings along with its spectacular innovations.
Published in Architectural RecordUntil five years ago, the stretch of Flatbush Avenue between the Manhattan Bridge and Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn was an architectural wasteland. Not anymore!
Published in Architectural Record
It's still early in 2014, but already several important modernist buildings have fallen, inclduing Bertrand Goldberg's cloverleaf-shaped Prentice Women's Hospital
Published in Architectural RecordThe role of Jews in creating and popularizing post-war modernism is the subject of a new exhibition at the Contemporary Jewish Museum of San Francisco. Think Eichler, Levitt, Guggenheim, and Fallingwater.
Published in Architectural Record“I’m glad my landscape architect is Dutch,” Leslie Koch, president of the Trust for Governors Island, said after Superstorm Sandy struck
Published in Architectural RecordPreservationists in most countries would envy Japan its National Archives of Modern Architecture, conceived by the late architectural historian Hiroyuki Suzuki and created by the government in 2012.
Published in Architectural RecordMuseum curators tend to stay behind the scenes, especially when high-profile artists are involved. But the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Jeff Koons: A Retrospective, which runs through October 19, has been so lavishly praised that its curator, Scott Rothkopf, couldn’t stay out of the spotlight if he tried
Published in Architectural RecordArchitects have something new to worry about
Published in Architectural RecordThe Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture can be as unconventional as its founder
Published in Architectural RecordDavid van der Leer, the institute’s new director, arranged to swap its longtime quarters on the sixth floor of a Flatiron district building for a storefront space in the same building
Published in Architectural RecordWhen Peter Wynne Rees became the chief planner of the City of London in 1985, the famous “square mile” had only one hotel. Now two of the City’s most important Edwardian buildings are becoming luxury hotels.
Published in Architectural RecordThe great Fire Island architect gets the recognition he deserves
Published in Wallpaper*After 12 years of astonishing change in New York, Bloomberg earns mixed marks
Published in Architectural RecordDiller Scofidio + Renfro, H3 Hardy Collaboration, SHoP Architects, and SOM present plans to relocate the arena so Penn Station can be rebuilt.
Published in Architectural Record
A confidant of I. M. Pei, Perry Chin was asked to consult on plans to give Pei’s East Building of the National Gallery in Washington new heating, cooling, security, and fire safety systems
Published in Architectural RecordGame Changer: Columbia University's quirky but tough field house bridges the divide between its gritty surroundings and the athletic playing fields beyond
Published in Architectural RecordRenewing an important campus by Paul Rudolph poses dangers and the chance to keep his work alive
Published in Architectural RecordA conversation with Bill Pedersen, whose firm Kohn Pedersen Fox is responsible for the development's master plan.
Published in Architectural RecordThe exhibition "Informal Studio: Marlboro South" at Johannesburg's Goethe-Institut explores the need for legal housing for armies of squatters
Published in Architectural RecordWhat happens to architecturally important private homes when families who have protected them—sometimes for four decades or more—decide to sell
Published in Architectural RecordMarmol Radziner has restored and adapted E. Stewart Williams' 1961 Santa Fe Federal Savings & Loan building for use by the museum.
Published in Architectural Record“La Sapienza" is a rarity: a fictional film about real architecture
Published in Architectural RecordA new book looks at more than 50 recently completed, architecturally ambitious Japanese dwellings
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)The California-based interiors wunderkind creates smart, soulful homes that feel like extensions of their occupants
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Alan Eckstein, cofounder of the label Timo Weiland, turns his gaze from fashionable clothing to timeless objects
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Decades into a renowned career, the Seattle architect Tom Kundig continues using humble materials to create pared-down forms that exist in harmony with their often-spectacular settings
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)The American designer has built his reputation on helping clients express their personalities through their homes
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Working from his studios in Chicago and New York City, Dirk Denison designs residences that are uniquely tailored to the individuals who call them home
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)As much sculptors of space and curators of experience as they are architects, the partners of San Francisco's Aidlin Darling Design create emotionally evocative residences that appeal to more than just the eye
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)The Academy Award–winning actress and design maven tells us how she turned to the image-collecting site for inspiration in planning her new house
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)The late starchitect had a penchant — and a gift — for designing instantly iconic objects, from cars to sofas to bracelets
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)The California architect has found herself in high demand, thanks to her floating foundations and walls that open to the world
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Brazil’s leading design talent executes Bauhaus minimalism with near-magical moments of drama in a string of understated hotels and homes
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Equal parts preservationist and renovationist, California-born Brooklyn-based architect Elizabeth Roberts has cultivated a collection of discriminating clients who come to her for sensitive and smart redesigns of historic residences in her home borough
If everything is bigger in Texas, Marfa is the exception. A new book examines the homes in this art-focused desert city, where less is best
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)The Southern California interior designer has won the trust of her high-flying clients by mixing materials, styles and eras to make rooms come alive
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Architects and designers are using humble timber to create awe-inspiring structures and interiors around the globe
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)Fresh off a series of successes (including the new Philadelphia home of the Barnes Foundation) and one preservationist brouhaha (the imminent destruction of their beloved 2001 American Folk Art Museum), the husband-and-wife architects Tod Williams and Billie Tsien are looking to the future, with projects from Mexico City to Mumbai
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)MDFG cofounders Jeffrey Graetsch and Ashley Booth Klein, who also happen to be a married couple, have filled their apartment and their gallery with works by mid-century design icons
Published in Introspective (1stdibs)In several apartments in Los Angeles, the architecture critic has created murals that fool the eye into connecting distinct surfaces
Published in The New York TimesThe Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Conn., will open an $8-million building that artists can saw through, drill through, and generally mangle, just as they did at the museum's original home
Published in The New York TimesPhilip Johnson's synagogue in Port Chester, New York, is now as practical as it is beautiful
Published in The New York TimesA group of Auburn University students are designing a bridge for Volkswagen’s planned factory in Tennessee
Published in The New York TimesPaul Rudolph designed this glamorous apartment nearly four decades ago. It still dazzles today
Published in T Magazine (The New York Times)The three-year, $44 million restoration is a hit
Published in The New York Times
Carlos Brillembourg, an architect, and Karin Waisman, an artist, built a modern house in the Hamptons that is spacious, spare and stylish
Published in The New York Times