In the aftermath of catastrophe, architecture is tested not by how it photographs but by what it restores: privacy, warmth, agency. Shigeru Ban’s work insists that the “temporary” is not
In the aftermath of catastrophe, architecture is tested not by how it photographs but by what it restores: privacy, warmth, agency. Shigeru Ban’s work insists that the “temporary” is not
In January 2019, a tailings dam at Vale’s Córrego do Feijão mine in Brumadinho collapsed, sending a torrent of mining waste through communities and waterways and killing 272 people. On
In Seosomun History Park, nothing signals a museum at first. People cut across the grass, pause in the shade, take the shortest line through the site. Red brick walls sit
In the Nanchuan District of Chongqing, Drifting Stones frames a quiet encounter with the mountains. Set among evergreen trees, sheer cliffs and a narrow stream, the project is deliberately small
Nestled along the historic banks of the Qinhuai River in Nanjing, the Big Red Crayfish project transforms a 2,000-square-metre heritage site into a vibrant gastronomic and commercial destination. Designed by
In the rolling fields of a Devon farm, where a young David Chipperfield once imagined a life mending animals as a veterinarian, the foundations of a disciplined temperament took root.
An adaptive reuse project links a 1949 hanok and a 1968 concrete building through an alley inspired stairwell, layering urban memory into a new contemporary order.
A mirrored gateway and a blackened counterpart anchor Greenwich Peninsula’s Design District, turning the archetype of the artist studio into a flexible, light driven workplace for a new creative neighbourhood.
A historic harbor structure reimagined as a public cultural landscape on the Le Havre waterfront
In a dense pocket of Osaka where office towers meet restaurant frontages, a former lottery ticket booth has been reworked into a takeout only pastry shop for Canule dou, a