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Let Us Celebrate the Women who are Shaping Architectural Practices Around the World

March 29, 2018 Keshia Badalge 0

Where are the women architects?” Despina Stratigakos, an architectural historian and professor, lamented in her book about women in the practice. (She even titled her book that very question.) The sentiment was certainly a resounding one, well-understood by many women who have worked in the profession and had to break through a male citadel. We know the number of women in architecture is small, and it gets smaller the higher up we look. 

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BIG’s Shenzhen International Energy Mansion Captured by Laurian Ghinitoiu

March 24, 2018 Keshia Badalge 0

The Shenzhen International Energy Mansion is the main headquarters of the Shenzhen Energy Company in China. In designing the building, Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) paid special attention to one feature: the building’s facade. The firm knew that in such a tropical climate, using a traditional curtain wall glass envelope would overheat the buildings and make people crank up their air conditioners. What BIG came up with in their winning design, and what is now the building’s most defining feature, is a folded, origami-like facade. This facade provides high insulation and diffuses incoming sunlight, while reflecting the strongest rays onto solar panels.

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Why Does The Gender Pay Gap Issue Make People Uncomfortable?

March 19, 2018 Keshia Badalge 0

Last week, ArchDaily covered a story about the gender pay gap at Foster + Partners. We thought such a story was “unsurprising” given that the gender pay gap is something that is widely reported on, and present in almost every industry, and we wanted to share a case of it happening in an architectural firm many of us are familiar with. What we did not expect was that readers would think it is a non-issue, or that such reporting was sensational. Is it possible for us to talk about gender in the workplace without being up in arms? Why does the gender pay gap issue make people uncomfortable? 

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AD Classics: Smith House / Richard Meier & Partners

February 28, 2018 Keshia Badalge 0

Five decades ago, Carole Smith called Richard Meier and told him about a site in Darien, Connecticut that she had bought with her husband. This was a rocky piece of land with dense evergreens and coastal outcrops. A dramatic slope at the back of the plot gave way to the Long Island Sound and a small, sandy cove. Carole wanted to place her weekend home on this particular site and she commissioned Richard Meier to design the house for her. At that time, he was just 31.

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Laurian Ghinitoiu Captures Visitors’ Delight at Asif Khan and Hyundai’s Interactive Olympic Pavilion

February 24, 2018 Keshia Badalge 0

Earlier this month, the Winter Olympics was officially opened in South Korea. Laurian Ghinitiou visited PyeongChang to capture the celebrations and the festivities of the Winter Olympic Games. At the Olympic Park, he turned his lens towards the now-famous Vantablack VBx2 building designed by Hyundai and Asif Khan. The pavilion was conceived of as a “narrative” and everything from the facade to the five rooms within — water, solar, electrolysis, hydrogen fuel stack and recreation of water — were part of the story. 

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Laurian Ghinitoiu Captures Visitors’ Delight at Asif Khan and Hyundai’s Interactive Olympic Pavilion

February 24, 2018 Keshia Badalge 0

Earlier this month, the Winter Olympics was officially opened in South Korea. Laurian Ghinitiou visited PyeongChang to capture the celebrations and the festivities of the Winter Olympic Games. At the Olympic Park, he turned his lens towards the now-famous Vantablack VBx2 building designed by Hyundai and Asif Khan. The pavilion was conceived of as a “narrative” and everything from the facade to the five rooms within — water, solar, electrolysis, hydrogen fuel stack and recreation of water — were part of the story.