The Oklahoma Architect Who Turned Kitsch Into Art

Jan. 31, 2026 Ι Bloomberg CityLab  Toward the end of his career in the late 1970s, the architect Bruce Goff lived with his mother and a tuxedo-hued cat named Chiaroscuro in the small city of Tyler, Texas. He stopped work promptly at 4:30 p.m. each day to watch Star Trek. His favorite meal was roast… Continue reading The Oklahoma Architect Who Turned Kitsch Into Art

Architecture’s Mercurial Moment: The GSD at the 2025 Chicago Architecture Biennial

Nov. 20, 2025 Ι Harvard GSD Magazine Online  With an unapologetic plurality, the 2025 Chicago Architecture Biennial (CAB), curated by artistic director Florencia Rodriguez (LF ‘13), associate curator Chani Haouzi (MArch ’14), and associate curator Igo Kommers Wender, captures architecture at a particularly mercurial moment. Themed SHIFT: Architecture in Times of Radical Change, this sixth… Continue reading Architecture’s Mercurial Moment: The GSD at the 2025 Chicago Architecture Biennial

Can Anyone Save Gary, Indiana?

Nov. 4, 2025 Ι Bloomberg CityLab  On either side of the impeccably refined and classically domed City Hall and courthouse buildings that make up the largely vacant civic core of Gary, Indiana, are two stark white modernist buildings. Both were designed by Black architect Wendell Campbell, a founder of the National Organization of Minority Architects,… Continue reading Can Anyone Save Gary, Indiana?

Yesterday’s Schools of Tomorrow Face the Future

Sept. 11, 2025 Ι Bloomberg CityLab  When a solar eclipse passed through Columbus, Indiana, in May 1994, fifth-grader Josh Mings watched the cosmic ballet from the atrium of Southside Elementary School, a hulking Brutalist structure designed by architect Eliot Noyes. Completed in 1969, it’s among the town’s most famous — and daring — examples of… Continue reading Yesterday’s Schools of Tomorrow Face the Future

Affordable Housing for the Long-Haul

Summer 2025 Ι Chicago Architect  In Chicago’s gentrifying and affluent neighborhoods, the struggle to build and preserve affordable housing is won through both penny-pinching resource efficiency and a willingness to open up the checkbook for more durable, long-lasting materials and finishes. The need to integrate supportive services is balanced by recreational amenities, especially when affordable… Continue reading Affordable Housing for the Long-Haul