By Douglas Kruger IN Japan, beer is cheaper than bottled water. That’s how you know you’ve achieved peak civilisation.
The Forrestal Building’s form is impeding its function as home of the Energy Department. Victoria Coates, a vice president of ...
I should be happy. It is exceedingly rare to have a major Hollywood film take architecture as its central subject, and this ...
The Gateshead flyover was a vital artery in the heart of the town, until a routine survey suddenly shut it down. Now it ...
For more than 50 years, the Gateshead flyover – a hulking concrete relic of 1960s ambition – has stood as both a vital artery and a divisive landmark in the heart of the Tyneside town, bearing the ...
Now that the White House has decreed that all new government structures be made in a classical style, let’s cue up the ...
It has always felt purposefully confusing, as though it were built to disorient any 70s protesters who might storm the gates.
Yet “The Brutalist” doesn’t relay much about Brutalist architecture beyond its reflexive relationship ... brick and glass harsh – even ugly – there is a beautiful intent behind them. Historian and ...
Dallas begins landmarking process for City Hall Mark Lamster on why brutalist civic architecture is worth saving ...
In 1950, ten years after Brunner’s departure, Le Corbusier, a Swiss-French architect, one of the most prominent proponents of ...
A story he tells about his mother's parents should be a warning to Toth, but by now he’s chasing the American dream. The Van ...
The complex of more than 2,000 homes, which opened on the fringes of the City in 1969, was widely mocked and voted London’s ...