“Archifutures” Represents a Vital Infusion of Oxygen Into the Arena of Architectural Discourse

July 31, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Publishing is a cultural project, first collecting and condensing ideas and then diffusing them. In the architectural sphere, it is a pursuit which has often struggled to tackle an inherent paradox: is a book, for instance, speaking to an audience entirely “in the know” or one completely fresh to the concepts, ideas, and figures which tend to envelop the discourse – often resonating like records on repeat.

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Columbia GSAPP’s New “Extraction Lab” Will Launch in Black Rock Desert

July 31, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Columbia GSAPP’s Extraction Lab, led by Christoph Kumpusch, is a five year-long project beginning in August of this year with a student workshop at the 2017 Burning Man Festival in Black Rock Desert, Nevada. “With the desert as a canvas, and Burning Man as a context,” the project will deploy a roof structure into the heart of the gathering in order to—among other goals—”extract what is most absent in the landscape: water.” In this episode of GSAPP Conversations, Kumpusch outlines just what the new laboratory has planned.

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Columbia GSAPP’s New “Extraction Lab” Will Launch in Black Rock Desert

July 31, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Columbia GSAPP’s Extraction Lab, led by Christoph Kumpusch, is a five year-long project beginning in August of this year with a student workshop at the 2017 Burning Man Festival in Black Rock Desert, Nevada. “With the desert as a canvas, and Burning Man as a context,” the project will deploy a roof structure into the heart of the gathering in order to—among other goals—”extract what is most absent in the landscape: water.” In this episode of GSAPP Conversations, Kumpusch outlines just what the new laboratory has planned.

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With Costs Soaring, SHoP-Designed “World’s Skinniest Skyscraper” Faces Foreclosure

July 28, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

The SHoP-designed 111 West 57th Street, “the world’s skinniest skyscraper,” is at risk of never being completed due to soaring construction costs, the New York Post has reported. With fewer than 20 of the supertall skyscraper’s 82 stories currently constructed, a lawsuit filed by investment group AmBase is claiming the project is already $50 million over budget due in part to “egregious oversights” including neglecting to factor in the cost of construction cranes.

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In This Semi-Derelict Montenegrin Prison, 7 Temporary Structures Untangle the Spatial Possibilities of Nautical Rope

July 28, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

Kotor is an ancient fortified city located in a secluded bay on Montenegro’s Adriatic coast. It has been Venetian, Austrian and—most recently—part of the former Yugoslavia. Today, as part of an independent nation, it’s narrow streets, small squares, and warm stone buildings define the character of a UNESCO World Heritage Site which, each summer, becomes one vast cruise terminal as tourists arrive in their droves to bask in it’s dry heat and spectacular natural environment. At this time, however, it also plays host to KotorAPSS (Architectural Prison Summer School) – an eight day-long gathering dedicated to infusing contemporary cultural life into the city by means of temporary architectural installations.

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Pablo Bronstein to Exhibit an Exploration of “Pseudo-Georgian Architecture” at London’s RIBA

July 27, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

A new exhibition of commissioned work by American artist Pablo Bronstein at London’s Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) will explore “ubiquitous” neo-Georgian developments as exemplar of a British vernacular. The show—Pablo Bronstein: Conservatism, or The Long Reign of Pseudo-Georgian Architecture—will feature fifty new drawings of buildings constructed during the second half of the 20th Century in “an ostensibly neo-Georgian style.” These will be presented alongside historical Georgian and neo-Georgian material chosen by Bronstein from the RIBA’s collections.

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Pablo Bronstein to Exhibit an Exploration of “Pseudo-Georgian Architecture” at London’s RIBA

July 27, 2017 AD Editorial Team 0

A new exhibition of commissioned work by American artist Pablo Bronstein at London’s Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) will explore “ubiquitous” neo-Georgian developments as exemplar of a British vernacular. The show—Pablo Bronstein: Conservatism, or The Long Reign of Pseudo-Georgian Architecture—will feature fifty new drawings of buildings constructed during the second half of the 20th Century in “an ostensibly neo-Georgian style.” These will be presented alongside historical Georgian and neo-Georgian material chosen by Bronstein from the RIBA’s collections.