FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA/EPA
A former colleague of the award-winning architect Zaha Hadid pays tribute to her ‘great presence’.
One of the architects of 443 Queen Street says: ‘The Queenslander – elevated on stilts and open to natural ventilation – was an inspiration for the tower’.
Artist's Impression
Landmarks identify and define cities. Town-planning instruments should protect these landmarks from new development that does not respect the setting.
Luke Willett
Osborne’s grand scheme needs solid foundations: and that’s where architecture can lend a hand.
Virtual reality is improving in leaps and bounds.
Shutterstock
From education to sport to sex, virtual reality has dozens of applications, and we’re only just scratching the surface of its potential today.
The BreezeBlock house, designed by Eva-Marie Prineas for her sister.
Katherine Lu
One of the very first pieces of advice you receive in architecture school is Never Work For Family: the risks are too great, runs the argument, there’s too much emotion and too much money at stake, and…
Sarah G.../Flickr
Wheatley has expertly reimagined Ballard’s futuristic novel in a way that rings true to modern living.
The city of light has found a way to draw on the resources of the private sector, while looking after the interests of its citizens.
Tidal Lagoon, Swansea Bay, as envisaged by LDA Design.
http://www.lda-design.co.uk
Celebrate the shift to renewable energy with bold designs that add to the landscape.
China’s National Theatre.
Mr.Yi.Zhao/Flickr
Our experts explain why China is taking a hard line on oversized, xenocentric, weird architecture. And no, it’s not to stifle Western influences.
from www.shutterstock.com
Jeremy Corbyn wants UK politics to be less theatrical – but the Palace of Westminster is the perfect stage for confrontation.
Martinde Bouter/3DPrintCanalHouse
There’s a lot of hype around 3D printing – should we believe it?
Changing fortunes. Benwell, Newcastle upon Tyne.
Phil Thirkell
The tower block is in the dock but terraced housing is on the up.
Paolo Margari/Flickr
It’s worth preserving Britain’s brutalist buildings for two key reasons: heritage, and money.
The freedom of the space outside can be a seductive distraction.
from www.shutterstock.com.au
Had the Romans, Chinese and English of old seen our buildings, built around views that distract from the interior and our interior lives, they would not have been surprised by modern discontent.
from www.shutterstock.com
From metal spikes to bagpipes, nasty architecture is making life harder for the homeless.
John James Audubon’s American Flamingo (1838).
Sotheby's
A review of some of the top arts and culture stories from the past year.
techboy_t/Flickr
Stark new additions to our urban landscape are usually met with moaning – but it rarely lasts.
© Assemble
Perhaps the “art” label designates Assemble and the Granby project as outsiders, unique, creating something that can’t be replicated.
City residents are embracing the bike as the fastest, most convenient transport in areas like Brunswick, yet an apartment building has been blocked for not providing car parking.
flickr/Takver
It’s up to state governments to ensure urban planning rules properly reflect both the desires of residents in the 21st century and the principles of sustainability.
Grim, single sex workers’ hostels are still common in South Africa’s economic capital Johannesburg.
Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters
Architects and those working on the built environment can learn valuable lessons about their discipline – how it’s taught, and how it’s carried out – from the 2015 student protests.