Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

Last Friday at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Achva Stein gave a tour of the new Moroccan Court, followed by cocktails on the roof; also on 6/15, Rick Bell’s Center for Architecture hosted the AIA New York Chapter’s 145th Annual Meeting, where Lance Jay Brown is the 2013 First Vice President/2014 President-Elect; last Saturday in Shanghai, Board Member Thom Mayne spoke at the XXL Supertall Buildings conference co-hosted by Tonji University and USC; while 6/16 in the South Bronx, Kaja Kuhl hosted a workshop about her phytoremediation project; Laurie Kerr was at the Center for Architecture on 6/18 for a talk about “NYC’s Net Zero School”; Architecture for Humanity is having an online auction, running from 6/19 through 6/29, featuring work by Patron Steven Holl, Daniel Libeskind, and Moshe Safdie; Jack Nyman’s Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute is hosting the day-long Advanced Energy Performance: Real Estate’s New Energy Asset Management Paradigm conference (pictured above) on 6/21, where both he and Laurie Kerr will speak.
Tags: 145th Annual Meeting, Achva Stein, Advanced Energy Performance, AIA NY, Architecture for Humanity, Center for Architecture, daniel libeskind, Jack Nyman, Kaja Kuhl, Lance Jay Brown, Laurie Kerr, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Moroccan Court, Morphosis, moshe safdie, NYC's Net Zero School, phytoremediation, Real Estate's New Energy Asset Management Paradigm, Rick Bell, Shanghai, South Bronx, Steven Holl, Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute, Thom Mayne, Tonji University, USC, XXL Supertall Buildings, youarethecity
Posted in Events, Exhibitions | Comments Off
Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012
Bentonville’s 21c Museum Hotel, designed by Deborah Berke, broke ground last month; Urban Omnibus visited Matthew Berman’s BLDG 92 museum and visitors center at the Brooklyn Navy Yard; Andrew Bernheimer and his sister Kate, an award-winning fairy tale author, collaborated on a three-part series of posts at Places Journal that gives architectural form to famous fairy tale houses; Matt Blesso and Mark Gardner were both interviewed as part of openhousenewyork’s “I Am OHNY” series; NYC Media released a video extolling the virtues of Colin Cathcart’s Greenhouse Project at Manhattan’s P.S. 333; the first renderings of a curvaceous new Maggie’s Centre in Aberdeen, Scotland, designed by Craig Dykers, made a splash; Vince Ferrandino is leading the effort to build a solid transition team for Mount Vernon, New York’s mayor-elect Ernie Davis; Mary Margaret Jones led a public forum on Hargreaves Associates’ new plan for Richmond’s James Riverfront; John Portman has opened a new office in Hong Kong–his fourth in Asia, after Shanghai, Seoul, and Mumbai; and it’s not every day that you can see a Fellow’s work in a big-screen blockbuster, but the ASLA’s The Dirt recently pointed out that John Wong’s Burj Khalifa Park has something of a “starring role” in the new Mission Impossible movie!
Tags: 21c Museum Hotel, Aberdeen, Andrew Bernheimer, Architecture, ASLA, Bentonville, BLDG 92, brooklyn, Brooklyn Navy Yard, Burj Khalifa, Colin Cathcart, construction, Craig Dykers, Deborah Berke, Ernie Davis, fairy tales, Greenhouse Project, Hargreaves Associates, Hollywood, Hong Kong, James River, john portman, John Wong, Kate Bernheimer, landscape architecture, Maggie's Centre, manhattan, Mark Gardner, Mary Margaret Jones, matt blesso, matthew berman, Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Mount Vernon, Mumbai, New York City, NYC Media, OHNY, Places Journal, politics, public forum, Richmond, seoul, Shanghai, SWA Group, Urban Omnibus, Vince Ferrandino, waterfront, workshop/apd
Posted in Institute News | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 18th, 2011
The NY Times spoke to Rick Bell about the planned expansion of the Center for Architecture, designed by Rob Rogers; the jury for a competition to re-design the Capitol Mall in Sacramento (pictured at left) included EE&K’s Peter David Cavaluzzi; the new book Beyond Shelter, published by Metropolis Books, features work by Jim Dart and Deborah Gans; the Architect’s Newspaper visited the newly-opened TASHAN restaurant in Philadelphia, designed by Board Member Winka Dubbeldam; ArchDaily recently posted a great video interview with Patron Steven Holl; today marks the start of construction on Board Member Enrique Norten’s new Rutgers Business School Building in Livingston, New Jersey; construction work on a new half-billion-dollar mixed-use complex designed by John Portman at the former site of the Shanghai Expo is just beginning in China’s largest city; IBM’s SmartPlanet.com took an in-depth look at the intricate facade of Matthias Sauerbruch’s KfW Westarkade in Frankfurt; Robert AM Stern’s George W. Bush Presidential Center in Texas recently had its topping-out ceremony; and Beverly Willis reviewed critic Paul Goldberger’s book Why Architecture Matters for the Associates of the Art Commission.
Tags: AIANY, Architect's Newspaper, Associates of the Art Commission, Beverly Willis, Beyond Shelter, California, Capitol Mall, Center for Architecture, China, construction, Dallas, Deborah Gans, design competition, Enrique Norten, Frankfurt, George W. Bush Presidential Center, Germany, Housing, IBM, interview, Jim Dart, john portman, jury, KfW Westarkade, landscape architecture, Livingston, manhattan, Matthias Sauerbruch, mixed-use, New Jersey, New Orleans, New York City, New York Times, Paul Goldberger, Peter David Cavaluzzi, Philadelphia, redevelopment, review, Rick Bell, Rob Rogers, Robert AM Stern, Rogers Marvel, Rutgers University, Sacramento, Shanghai, Steven Holl, TASHAN, TEN Arquitectos, Texas, Why Architecture Matters, Winka Dubbeldam, World Expo
Posted in Institute News | Comments Off
Tuesday, August 9th, 2011
The Design Trust for Public Space announced three Fellows for its Making Manhattan project–including two IfUD Fellows, Andy Bernheimer and Colin Cathcart; the Society for Ecological Restoration International announced Steven N. Handel as the winner of the 2011 Theodore Sperry Award; Sudhir Jambhekar and Hank White won an International Architecture Award for the King Abdullah Financial District Mosque in Riyadh (pictured at left), while Board Member Thom Mayne won for the Giant Interactive Group Corporate Headquarters in Shanghai; John Portman has been announced as a candidate for election to the American Furniture Hall of Fame; and Don Stastny was inducted into the College of Fellows of the Canadian Institute of Planners, following earlier elevations to Fellowship in both the American Institute of Architects and the American Institute of Certified Planners.
Tags: American Furniture Hall of Fame, Andrew Bernheimer, Canadian Institute of Planners, Colin Cathcart, Design Trust for Public Space, Don Stastny, Giant Interactive, Hank White, Inernational Architecture Award, john portman, King Abdullah Financial District Mosque, Making Manhattan, mosque, New York City, office building, Riyadh, Shanghai, Society for Ecological Restoration International, Steven N. Handel, Sudhir Jambhekar, Theodore Sperry Award, Thom Mayne
Posted in Prizes and Awards | Comments Off
Thursday, May 19th, 2011
Renderings of Ocean Dreams (pictured at left), a mixed-use complex of high-rises on the Coney Island Boardwalk designed by Richard Dattner’s firm, was unveiled; the April issue of Interior Design magazine features an eight-page spread on Board Member Winka Dubbeldam’s new Ports 1961 flagship in Shanghai; Executive Director Anne Guiney was interviewed about how changes in zoning and policy in New York are impacting the East Village; Alison Arieff called John Hartmann’s Bright Dawn Farm project “a glimmer of hope” for the future of suburbia in a New York Times Opinionator article on Droog’s recent Open House event in Levittown; the latest Architect magazine features a survey of national architecture policies by Board Member Cathy Lang Ho; construction is wrapping up on not one, but two new museums designed by Patron Steven Holl, in France and China; Board Member Enrique Norten’s zig-zagging Mercedes House tower opened in Manhattan; the New York Public Library kicked off construction on Lyn Rice’s Hamilton Grange Branch Teen Center; and Rob Rogers’ firm was named as one of five finalists in the competition to re-design DC’s Ellipse, in front of the White House.
Tags: Anne Guiney, Boardwalk, Bright Dawn Farm, brooklyn, Cathy Lang Ho, China, competition, Coney Island, construction, Dattner Architects, East Village, Ellipse, Enrique Norten, France, Freecell, Hamilton Grange, interior design, John Hartmann, Levittown, Lyn Rice, manhattan, Mercedes House, Midtown, mixed-use, museum, New York City, New York Public Library, New York Times, Ocean Dreams, Ports 1961, public policy, Richard Dattner, Rob Rogers, Rogers Marvel, Shanghai, skyscraper, Steven Holl, urban agriculture, washington dc, White House, Winka Dubbeldam, zoning
Posted in Institute News | Comments Off
Thursday, April 21st, 2011
The New York Times went shopping for coffee tables with Deborah Berke; AECOM Chief Innovation Officer Joseph Brown commented on his firm’s new partnership with IBM’s Smarter Planet Initiative; the Shanghai flagship of retailer Ports 1961, designed by Board Member Winka Dubbeldam, has just opened; Toronto’s Ryerson University revealed renderings of an eye-catching new building by Craig Dykers‘ Snøhetta (pictured at left); William Fain served on the jury of this year’s AIA Pennsylvania Design Excellence Awards, which were presented this past week; Patron Steven Holl’s athletic center for Columbia in Inwood was recently approved by the city; Apartment Therapy Boston featured Deborah Grossberg Katz’s “A Cabin in a Loft” project; the Lynn University Performing Arts Center, designed by Herbert Newman, is featured in the March 2011 issue of American School & University Magazine [PDF]; Linda Pollak reviewed NYC’s new High Performance Landscape Guidelines in Topos 74 [PDF]; construction has begun on John Portman’s newest hotel in Shenzhen; Richard Sennett was announced as one of the jurors for the Watermill Center’s International Residency Program; and John Wong’s SWA Group will be designing a new park around an historic schoolhouse in Milpitas, CA.
Tags: AECOM, AIA Pennsylvania, Archi-Tectonics, artists, awards, Boston, Cabin in a Loft, California, Columbia University, Craig Dykers, Deborah Berke, deborah grossberg katz, Design Excellence, Development, furniture, Herbert Newman, High Performance Landscape Guidelines, IBM, innovation, interior design, Inwood, john portman, John Wong, Joseph Brown, jury, Katz Chiao, landscape architecture, Linda Pollak, Lynn University, manhattan, Milpitas, New York City, New York Times, Newman Architects, Ports 1961, retail, Richard Sennett, Ryerson University, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Smarter Planet Initiative, Snohetta, Steven Holl, SWA Group, Toronto, university, Watermill Center, William Fain, Winka Dubbeldam
Posted in Institute News | Comments Off
Friday, March 4th, 2011
DNAinfo.com spoke with Stephanie Gelb about a recent tussle over the use of recreational space in Battery Park City; eOculus recapped a recent panel discussion, featuring Beth Greenberg, on the extension of NYC’s #7 subway line; Kenneth Greenberg compared his plans for client Ryerson University’s bid to establish a face on Toronto’s famed Younge Street to NYU’s presence on Washington Square Park; Inhabitat explored Board Member Thom Mayne’s new campus for Giant Interactive in Shanghai (pictured at left); Herbert Newman’s firm was announced as the winner of a design competition for the Slover Memorial Library in Norfolk, VA; Architectural Record reviewed Board Member Enrique Norten’s renovation of the Chopo Museum in Mexico City; Land Securities released new designs by Matthias Sauerbruch’s for an office complex on London’s Old Bailey, and the Guardian profiled the architect’s recently-completed renovation of the Turkentor Gallery in Munich; and William Ryall’s Harlem loft is featured in the February issue of Dwell.
Tags: 7-line extension, Architectural Record, Battery Park City, Beth Greenberg, Chopo Museum, Dwell, Enrique Norten, eOculus, Giant Interactive, Guardian, Harlem, Herbert Newman, Inhabitat, Ken Greenberg, library, london, manhattan, Matthias Sauerbruch, Mexico City, Munich, New York City, Norfolk, NYU, Old Bailey, panel discussion, public space, Ryerson University, Shanghai, Stephanie Gelb, subway, Thom Mayne, Toronto, Turkentor Gallery, Washington Square Park, William Ryall, Younge Street
Posted in Institute News | Comments Off
Thursday, October 8th, 2009
On Tuesday, October 13, the Skyscraper Museum will host their fall kick-off lecture and reception, Shanghai Skyline.
Architectural Record Editor-in-Chief, Robert Ivy, will moderate a panel including Paul Katz, Institute fellow Bruce Fowle, Jack Portman, David Scott, and Timur Galen, who will recall how they snagged Shanghai commissions in the 1980s and ’90s, illustrate recent projects, and reflect on the relevance of the past recession for today’s downturn.
Tags: Architectural Record, Bruce Fowle, China, David Scott, Jack Portman, New York City, Paul Katz, Robert Ivy, Shanghai, Shanghai Skyline, Skyscraper Museum, Timur Galen
Posted in Events | Comments Off
Wednesday, June 13th, 2007
Institute executive director Olympia Kazi lectured at Tongji University in Shanghai about the history and evolution of the Institute for Urban Design. Following the presentation was a question-and-answer session with professors from the departments of Architecture, Preservation and Urban Planning about the latest strategies in design policy and the development of affordable housing.
Tags: China, Olympia Kazi, Shanghai, Tongji University
Posted in Events | Comments Off