PMc Mag called Matt Blesso “New York’s Host with the Most”; Susan Chin was announced [PDF] as the new Executive Director of the Design Trust for Public Space; the launch of an effort to find an architect for the re-vamp of Chicago’s iconic Navy Pier (pictured at left) led to rumblings that both Phil Enquist and Helmut Jahn are considering throwing their respective hats in the ring; Bruce Fowle served on the jury for the AIA’s National Healthcare Design Awards; Architectural Record profiled Alex Gorlin’s contemporary take on the rowhouse in East Brooklyn; CCGSAPP’s new blog features an interview with Alfredo Brillembourg and Denise Hoffman Brandt on their new co-edited issue of SLUM Lab, which debuted during Urban Design Week; Daniel Libeskind was announced as the architect for a new wing at his iconic Jewish Museum in Berlin; FastCo Design has a great story on the collaboration, in Villahermosa, Mexico, between Board Member Enrique Norten and Barbara Wilks on a new museum and park; Moshe Safdie’s Kauffman Center just opened in Kansas City; Jonathan Schrag was appointed to serve as Deputy Commissioner for Energy in the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection; and Board President Michael Sorkin’s new book, All Over the Map, has been receiving rave reviews from the likes of the Guardian and the Telegraph.
Fellows in the News: Dykers, Libeskind, and Pollak
Thursday, August 5th, 2010
Fellow Craig Dykers‘ firm Snøhetta was recently announced as the winner in the competition to design an addition to Mario Botta’s iconic SFMOMA in San Francisco; Fellow Daniel Libeskind (pictured at left) has signed on to design an addition to his original building for the Jewish Museum in Berlin; and Fellow Linda Pollak recently wrote a thought-provoking article on urban topographies over at Urban Omnibus.
Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture in DUMBO
Wednesday, November 4th, 2009
From November 12th to 21st, 2009, Berlin’s An Architektur presents Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture, which takes up the task of exploring possibilities and conditions of a socially committed architectural practice. All events are public, free dinner will be served during discussion evenings. An exhibition and a reading corner will support and document the discussions. Get there: Gair Building No 6, 81 Front Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201 (York Stop on the F Train).
