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“Inspirational” Frank Lloyd Wright Quotes for Every Occasion

June 8, 2017 Rory Stott 0

It’s no secret that Frank Lloyd Wright was among the architecture profession’s more colorful characters. Known as an outspoken and often unforgiving egotist, Wright’s appreciation of architecture was outshone only by his appreciation for himself—which is perhaps understandable, given that he ranks among the 20th century’s great geniuses. For better or worse (probably worse), Wright’s reputation has clung to the profession, thanks in large part to Ayn Rand, who used Wright as inspiration for the incorrigible lead character of one of her most famous books, The Fountainhead.

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Spotlight: Frank Lloyd Wright

June 8, 2017 Rory Stott 0

In 1991, the American Institute of Architects called him, quite simply, “the greatest American architect of all time.” Over his lifetime, Frank Lloyd Wright (June 8, 1867 – April 9, 1959) completed more than 500 architectural works; many of them are considered masterpieces. Thanks to the wide dissemination of his designs and his many years spent teaching at the school he founded, few architects in history can claim to have inspired more young people into joining the architecture profession.

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Spotlight: Carlo Scarpa

June 2, 2017 Rory Stott 0

One of the most enigmatic and underappreciated architects of the 20th century, Carlo Scarpa (June 2, 1906 – November 28, 1978) is best known for his instinctive approach to materials, combining time-honored crafts with modern manufacturing processes. In a 1996 documentary directed by Murray Grigor, Egle Trincanato, the President of the Fondazione Querini Stampalia for whom Scarpa renovated a Venetian palace in 1963, described how “above all, he was exceptionally skillful in knowing how to combine a base material with a precious one.”

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Spotlight: Norman Foster

June 1, 2017 Rory Stott 0

Arguably the leading name of a generation of internationally high-profile British architects, Norman Foster (born 1 June 1935)—or to give him his full title Norman Robert Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank of Reddish, OM, HonFREng—gained recognition as early as the 1970s as a key architect in the high-tech movement, which continues to have a profound impact on architecture as we know it today.

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Spotlight: Toyo Ito

June 1, 2017 Rory Stott 0

As one of the leading architects of Japan‘s increasingly highly-regarded architecture culture, 2013 Pritzker Laureate Toyo Ito (born June 1, 1941) has defined his career by combining elements of minimalism with an embrace of technology, in a way that merges both traditional and contemporary elements of Japanese culture.

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Draw Perfectly At Any Scale With This Augmented Reality App

May 24, 2017 Rory Stott 0

The ability to draw well is one of the most coveted skills in architecture. Unfortunately for those without an innate gift for sketching, it’s also one of the most difficult to learn—even if it can, contrary to popular opinion, be learned with commitment and practice. But for those poor souls without such talents, there is now a fix: an app called SketchAR.

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MVRDV’s Skygarden, a Transformed 983-Meter Former Highway, Opens in Seoul

May 20, 2017 Rory Stott 0

Today the Mayor of Seoul opened the Skygarden, a 983-meter elevated walkway designed by MVRDV which utilizes a formerly abandoned highway in the center of the South Korean capital. Located in Seoul’s Central Station district, the 16-meter-high linear park features a living catalog of Korea’s indigenous plants, featuring over 24,000 individual plants from 228 species and sub-species. The Skygarden is known in Korean as Seoullo 7017, a name which references the Korean for “Seoul Street,” and the 1970 and 2017, the years in which the structure was originally built and subsequently transformed.

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Svalbard “Doomsday” Seed Vault Floods After Record Winter Temperatures

May 19, 2017 Rory Stott 0

Earlier this year, the Global Seed Vault in Svalbard was flooded after record high temperatures over the winter caused some of the permafrost surrounding the vault to melt, reports The Guardian. The building’s entrance tunnel was flooded and then froze to create conditions “like a glacier” for those trying to enter. Fortunately, the vault itself was not breached, meaning no harm came to the building’s precious contents. However, the incident has raised questions about whether the building will be able to fulfill its purpose in the long term.