Some are in the planning stage, some are well underway, and some are already complete. The projects in our selection below are presented in no particular order, and hail from all over the world. Read ...
Frank Lloyd Wright made his name on some of the United States’ most striking structures: an angular skyscraper with cantilevered floors, natural homes that harmonized with their environments, a museum ...
Bethenny Frankel shut down the haters brutally criticizing her home’s décor by bragging about the millions she’s made off of flipping houses. The “Real Housewives of New York City” alum’s new home in ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about how good communication can lead women to success. Nine years later, Astley is celebrating her 100th issue at AD with ...
Most 11-year-olds want to go to Disneyland for spring break. Mine wanted to see architecture. While there is no shortage of iconic buildings in our hometown of New York City, Pennsylvania arguably has ...
Master quick architectural tree sketching in this digital tutorial! Learn how to create expressive trees in under 30 seconds to enhance your architectural drawings, presentations, and concept designs.
Learn how to bring your architectural ideas to life with Photoshop sketching. This step-by-step tutorial covers essential techniques for concept design, from composition and linework to shading and ...
‘The submissions that won us competitions, say 15 years ago, based on the strength of the ideas but without the appearance of working out every detail, would probably not be enough to win today.’ ...
Driving through Tashkent feels like flipping through an architecture picture book teeming with examples of Soviet brutalist, orientalist, modernist, futurist and neoclassical styles. One marvel after ...
These buildings and places capture the city’s playful approach to concrete-and-asphalt Modernism. By Michael Snyder Present-day São Paulo — a sprawl of concrete towers and asphalt laid like a quilt ...
His Brutalist buildings, praised during the Kennedy era, are now being demolished. A new exhibition in Manhattan looks at the limits of genius. By Michael Kimmelman American architecture’s bright, ...
Tony Saxon is a wiry, tattooed man in his early thirties who is proud of what he calls his “Jersey gonzo” work ethic—that is, “I’ve got a guy, or I’ll get a guy.” His legal surname is Netelkos, but he ...