AIArchitect Dec. 10, 2014 The American Institute of Architects Board of Directors on Dec. 10 awarded the AIA Gold Medal to Moshe Safdie, FAIA. Safdie first burst on the architecture scene with bold proclamations on the future of dwelling with Habitat 67, and has since refined this late Modernist manifesto into a balanced and moderated… Continue reading Moshe Safdie, FAIA, Awarded 2015 AIA Gold Medal
Author: zachmortice
The Halprins in Motion
Landscape Architecture Magazine Oct. 28, 2015 Put away your tracing paper and charcoal pencils. Shut your books. Stop thinking. Put on a blindfold and go for a walk in the woods. Make a structure out of yourselves, human bodies. Catalog everything that you see, hear, feel, and smell. Build a city out of beachside driftwood… Continue reading The Halprins in Motion
Inner City Incubator
An urgent renewal scheme for Chicago Residential Architect February 2015 Chicago is a city known for erecting massive, mega-scaled, dysfunctional housing projects, like Cabrini-Green and the Robert Taylor Homes, and tearing them down again a handful of decades later. Since the 1990s, the Chicago Housing Authority(CHA) has sought to atomize and disperse poverty by redeveloping more… Continue reading Inner City Incubator
3.1 Philip Lim
Contract Design Magazine September 2014 Pop-up stores are equal parts theater, art installation, marketing, and merchandise, deploying high-concept retail environments for short periods of time to create an event, often one in which buzz is as important as sales. But what happens when the event horizon is accelerated from just a few months to just… Continue reading 3.1 Philip Lim
Destination Unknown
Changes on track for Chicago’s historic Pullman neighborhood. Architects Newspaper June 2015 Two months after President Obama declared the historic company town of Pullman, Illinois a national monument, a group of architects, planners, and preservationists are examining ways to balance economic development and historic preservation in the newly protected neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side. The… Continue reading Destination Unknown
New Generations of Glass and Stone
Three University of Chicago projects evolve Collegiate Neo-Gothic in subtle ways Chicago Architect March/April 2015 All adaptive reuse projects have to confront how you represent and revise architecture of two distinct time periods. But in an adaptive reuse project where the original building was done in a historicist style, the problem is more complex: How… Continue reading New Generations of Glass and Stone