Making Next to Forest: Toshiko Mori’s studio demonstrates how design decisions relate to natural-resource use and protection
The argument that forests should remain untouched by human beings poses counterintuitive but considerable risks.
The argument that forests should remain untouched by human beings poses counterintuitive but considerable risks.
By Jonathan Lee (March II ’20) Greetings. Sit back, lay-down, stand up, kneel, curl into…
How do you like your salmon? If you prefer the natural look, that’s fine—there’s a…
Hansy Better Barraza
What hidden figures do our buildings and urban environment conceal? There…
Oana Stanescu
"I've never worked for a living. I consider working for a living…
Alfredo Thiermann
This is a seminar on the past and present relationship between architecture,…
Marc Angélil
The studio ‘Quo Vadis, Addis?’ addresses the question of how to integrate existing manufacturing zones…
Preston Scott Cohen
This studio continues the investigation of architectural consequences arising from the dismantlement of Confederate monuments…
by Edgar Rodriguez (March II ’20) Building upon the research developed for a suburban…
by Anna Goga (March II ’20) This project is located in-between the Diomede Islands, precisely…