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AN reveals the top facades covered in 2024
As the year comes to a close, AN is looking back on some of the most interesting building envelopes covered in 2024. The list includes projects from around the world with a variety of material expressions—including glass, aluminum, concrete, and timber—as well as programmatic functions, featuring a library, community center, institutional facilities, apartments, and offices. To keep up
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KPMB’s The Leaf features a state-of-the-art ETFE roof
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Vertical panels of copper wrap AiF’s 37 Hillside Senior Apartments
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Interactive Learning Pavilion couples concrete with aluminum railings
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Facades+ will return to Los Angeles on November 9 and 10
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AN talks with Bill Zahner about sustainability
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In Vietnam, a brick screen shades Tropical Space’s Premier Office
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Perkins&Will and Schmidt Hammer Lassen deliver performing arts center in China with faceted aluminum facades
On the banks of the Grand Canal in Tongzhou, China, the eastern gateway to Beijing, Perkins&Will and Schmidt Hammer Lassen (SHL) designed a performing arts center comprised of three venues. While the three structures differ in scale from one another, they share a visual and material symmetry recognizable in their material application: Each of the
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Metal mesh screens reduce solar gain on wood-framed residential building
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Cascading glass wraps timber office building in Kirkland by LMN Architects
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Kengo Kuma applies modular assembly scheme to student housing
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Avenier Cornejo architectes wrap a Parisian nursing home in brick
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INC’s Saint Mark’s Place brings terra-cotta and loggias to Boerum Hill
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Here are the facade trends that defined the past decade
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High-performance facades take center stage at Facades+ Boston
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COOKFOX and Buro Happold design living facade for birds and bees
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This San Antonio office is a revealing case study in tight building envelopes
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The facade of IKEA’s first full-size city center store cools its surroundings
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A modernist-inspired facade built for desert heat anchors Arizona State University’s Health Futures Center
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MVRDV’s Valley twists and turns with natural stone and green balconies