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BIG adds a pair of twisting travertine towers along New York City’s High Line
Architect: Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) Location: New York City Completion Date: 2024 Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) has completed One High Line, a pair of twisting, travertine-clad towers in Chelsea. The buildings, named for their proximity to the High Line, contain luxury condo units and a hotel. To preserve sight lines from the High Line to
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York University’s School of Continuing Studies stuns with a triangulated facade
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A locally-inspired material palette wraps facade of an English temple
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A facade influenced by modernism adds dimensionality to ETH Zurich’s campus
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MJMA screens a glulam-structured community center with aluminum mesh
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Facades+ returns to Houston with a program focused on prominent local buildings
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A curtain wall is attuned to the needs of NYU’s John A. Paulson Center
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Beyer Blinder Belle uses brick and glass curtain wall for National Urban League Headquarters in Harlem
Architect: Beyer Blinder Belle Location: New York City Completion Date: 2024 New York City–based design firm Beyer Blinder Belle (BBB) has completed the Urban Empowerment Center, a new mixed-use development along Harlem’s 125th Street. In addition to retail, office space, and affordable housing, the building will contain the headquarters of the National Urban League (NUL), a
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Advances in float glass are enabling ever more flexible, ethereal facade expressions
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Snøhetta’s Le Monde headquarters spans a rail yard with variegated glass
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Foster + Partners’ Russian Copper Company headquarters echoes its namesake material
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The historic Menokin House gets a novel rewrapping in structural glass
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Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s Columbia Business School carves out a niche with crystalline curves
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Thomas Phifer and Partners revives an unbuilt Mies van der Rohe project in Indiana
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The Aya delivers a new housing prototype with its four-faced facade
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PBDW Architects’ bulbous East Harlem Cooke School sails toward the future of learning
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Studio Ma’s Phoenix office oasis is shrouded in a kebonized wood scrim
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CO Architects showcases “clay’s anatomy” for its terra-cotta health building at ASU
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Porcelain panels go head-to-head with Chicago’s historic brick at 444 N Orleans
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SO–IL’s Brooklyn Amant Foundation art campus embraces idiosyncrasies of clay and cement brick