Carrasco International Airport by Rafael Viñoly

New York architects Rafael Viñoly have completed an airport with a curved roof in Montevideo, Uruguay. (more…)

Muscle

As spectacular to gaze at as it is comfortable to rest on, Muscle is a counterproposal to traditional stiff and motionless street furniture thanks to ..

Lawsuits Could Potentially Kill Atlantic Yards Development

0910barcrend.jpg

Here we were, after all the hubbub about kicking Frank Gehry off the Atlantic Yards project and Ellerbe Beckett stepping in, that everything was finished and going to move forward on the New Jersey Nets’ new arena from here on out. But apparently there’s still one big hurdle to jump. Bloomberg‘s James Russell reports that the developer, Forest City Ratner, is facing two lawsuits which it must win before construction can begin. One is from a Brooklyn-based activist group (who we discussed here when Gehry was still involved) who are trying to stop the project from moving forward and the other demands to know how the company has updated their environmental planning since they’ve made numerous changes to the original building plans. Should either one not go the developer’s way, there’s a healthy chance that none of it will happen at all (something Russel seems like he wouldn’t mind too terribly — we know his fellow critic over at the Times wouldn’t be left unhappy either). Here’s a bit:

If the judge in either case rules for the plaintiff, the resultant delay would make it almost impossible for Ratner to obtain financing through tax-exempt bonds that must be issued before the end of the year. An adverse ruling in either case also would give Barclays Plc the right to withdraw from a deal in which it would provide $400 million for naming rights on the arena.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

IT-Fornebu Portalbuilding by A-lab

Oslo studio A-Lab have completed a business centre and offices at the former Oslo Airport in Norway. (more…)

International Conference Center in Ouagadougou by CAAU

Lille office Coldefy & Associes Architectes Urbanistes (CAAU) have designed a conference centre for Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso, West Africa. (more…)

Prince Charles Ally Leon Krier Continues His Anti-Modern Tour

1123pasleon.jpg

Ah ha! We were right! Just a couple of weeks back, we were talking about Prince Charles‘ right hand man, the architect and fellow modernism hater, Leon Krier, and how we thought maybe his speaking engagement in San Diego might be “the first step toward getting Prince Charles’ over in the US to start messing with our architecture.” At the time, we jokingly assumed that was just our paranoid xenophobia talking, but now we’ve been vindicated. Krier has popped up again in California, moving up the coast to Pasadena, where he gave a talk and then invited people to walk around that city’s city center while he picked apart what was so wrong about it. On his talk, as relayed by reporter Larry Wilson, Krier said this:

“Most avant-garde architects not only live in traditional buildings themselves — they go on vacation in traditional buildings, they send their children to school in traditional buildings. It’s good enough for them, but not for the masses.”

Let’s get things straight. We agree with lots of things Krier says, particularly when it comes to city planning and building efforts, and we generally like the guy, even if he openly despises things that we like. But a statement like this is just absurd. Unlike he and Prince Charles, we’d wager that none of these “avant-garde architects” deal in such absolutes. It does not make someone a hypocrite to live or work in a building that isn’t exactly the same as the kind they’re design. If anything, it’s whatever the opposite of hypocrisy is (honesty?) — it’s an acknowledgment that architecture of all ages can be appreciated. To follow Krier’s logic: if you’re a rock musician, enjoying classical makes you the definition of a hypocrite.

Modern architects don’t want to tear everything down so they don’t have to engage with anything other than “avant-garde architecture.” They want cities and towns to be the living, breathing things they are, not the staid, lifeless, uniform dullness he and Charles would like them to be. Sure there are some bad apples in every city, but they’re as likely to come from 1885 as they are from 2005. And isn’t that what makes a city great?

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Office Building VDAB by BOB361

Here are some pictures of an office building in Sint Niklaas, Belgium, by BOB361 architects of Brussels and Paris, which is supported over a sloping car park by black and yellow angled columns. (more…)

Design Museum Holon inauguration date announced


Dezeenwire:
the Design Museum Holon have announced that the new building by Ron Arad Architects will be inaugurated on 31 January 2010. See press release below. (more…)

Vodafone headquarters by Barbosa Guimaraes

Portuguese photographer Nelson Garrido has sent us his photos of the new headquarters for mobile phone brand Vodafone in Porto, designed by architects Barbosa & Guimaraes of Matosinhos in Portugal. (more…)

Performa Hub by nOffice

dzn_sq_nOffice-Performa-04

Berlin architects nOffice designed Performa Hub, a venue for the Performa 09 biennial held in New York earlier this month. (more…)