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Plans Unveiled to Construct the World’s Largest and Most Secure Data Center in Northern Norway

August 16, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Plans have been revealed by American-Norwegian data company Kolos to construct the world’s largest data center, a claim based on the amount of electrical power the site intends to draw from the grid to supply its banks of servers and cooling facilities. Located in Ballangen, Norway, the proposed site sits within the Arctic Circle and would take advantage of the cold climate, low humidity, and the abundant supply of hydropower currently available in the area. 

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Erwin Wurm’s “Fat House” Is Exhibited Amid the Baroque Splendor of Vienna’s Upper Belvedere

August 14, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

In a new solo exhibition of the work of Erwin Wurm in the artist’s home city of Vienna, the “Fat House”—created in 2003—is being publicly displayed for the first time amid the baroque splendor of the Austrian capital’s historic Upper Belvedere. The central exhibition of Wurm’s work at 21er Haus comprises over forty “performative sculptures” and statues, examining “extraordinary examples of architecture and objects of daily use.”

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Spotlight: Peter Eisenman

August 11, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Whether built, written or drawn, the work of renowned architect, theorist and educator Peter Eisenman (born 11th August 1932) is characterized by Deconstructivism, with an interest in signs, symbols and the processes of making meaning always at the foreground. As such, Eisenman has been one of architecture’s foremost theorists of recent decades; however he has also at times been a controversial figure in the architectural world, professing a disinterest in more pragmatic concerns such as environmental sustainability.

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Zaha Hadid Architects Unveil Photographs of “World’s Tallest Atrium” Under Construction in Beijing

August 10, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Zaha Hadid Architects have released new photos showcasing the ongoing construction progress of Leeza SOHO, a mixed-use office tower in Beijing’s Lize Financial Business District. This twisting, contorted structural skeleton, which weaves together two separate sections of the tower and visually fuses them, will house the world’s tallest atrium, rising the full height of the building.

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Watch Eyal Weizman Explain Forensic Architecture’s Pioneering Investigatory Methods

August 9, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

In this film produced by Vice, Eyal Weizman—director of London-based research agency Forensic Architecture—explains how his team have developed methods of investigating bombings in areas of conflict across the globe. Using cellphone footage, examining floor plans, and utilising road maps, Weizman brings together scientists, journalists, and graphic designers in order “to analyze destroyed buildings for evidence of human rights abuses.”

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16 Achievement Stickers To Motivate Freelance Architects

August 8, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Life as an architect can sometimes be trying. These stickers, designed by  for The New Yorker, are designed to pep you up in your work day with a motivational boost, or a celebratory pat-on-the-back. Did you behave well during a Skype call? There’s a sticker for that. Did you finish that presentation before 1am? There’s a sticker for that, too. There’s even a little badge of honor for which you can self-decorate once you’ve sent that final, final… final draft to your Project Manager for review.

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BIG’s Cactus Towers in Copenhagen Will Stand Next to an Urban IKEA

August 7, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

A new project in central Copenhagen will see two Danish practices—Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) and Dorte Mandrup Architects—create a new urban IKEA store, a budget hotel, and housing linked together by green space. Set to open in 2019, the area—which sits adjacent to Kalvebod Brygge, close to the railway lines that pass through the city core—will be master-planned by Dorte Mandrup while two striking high-rise residential towers, dubbed “Cacti“, will be designed by BIG.

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Riku Ikegaya Constructs a Series of Nested Spaces in a Berlin Church Designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel

August 5, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Berlin is city in which the past and the present often collide – a phenomenon particularly acute when it comes to the built environment. In this project by Japanese architect and artist Riku Ikegaya, the interior of St. Elisabeth-Kirche (Church of St. Elizabeth)—designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel—is transformed by means of a structural installation. Consisting of a scale model of Schinkel’s plans for the Rosentaler Vorstadt Church, the artist has composed a “three-dimensional architectural sketch.”

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Pompidou Center to Open Gallery in Shanghai, Designed by David Chipperfield Architects

August 4, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

David Chipperfield Architects has revealed the design of the newest home of the Centre Pompidou, the West Bund Art Museum in Shanghai. The Parisian institution revealed the details with the announcement of a 5-year deal with the West Bund Group to stage exhibitions in the museum beginning in 2019. Approximately 20 exhibitions – including a focus on contemporary Chinese art – will be included in the deal, described by the Centre Pompidou as “the most important long-term cultural exchange project” between France and China.