Monday, June 6th, 2011
Civic watchdog Tom Angotti reviews the latest changes to the Bloomberg administration’s PlaNYC 2030 in the Gotham Gazette; Greg Baldwin sat on the jury for the Urban Land Institute’s 2011 Amanda Burden Urban Open Space Award; DesignShuffle visited a “whimsical” Nantucket home designed by Matt Berman; you can watch Ken Fisher interview Junior Achievement of New York director Joseph Peri on the latest episode of CUNY-TV’s Citywide; Anthony Flint argued for a re-write of Massachusetts’ state zoning law on Boston.com; the initial reviews of Ken Greenberg’s book Walking Home could generally be described as “glowing,” with the Toronto Star, the Globe and Mail, and Treehugger all sounding off; the Tribune’s Blair Kamin reviews Helmut Jahn’s just-opened Mansueto Library at the University of Chicago (pictured at left); NYC’s Village Alliance, led by Fellow William Kelley, is undertaking a detailed survey of local residents and merchants to revive West 8th Street; Daniel Libeskind just finished an addition to his first completed project, the Felix Nussbaum Haus in Osnabrück, Austria; and Michael Stepner spoke to the Voice of San Diego about the streamlining of that city’s charter.
Tags: Amanda Burden, Anthony Flint, Architecture, Austria, award, Blair Kamin, Chicago, CityWide, CUNYTV, daniel libeskind, Felix Nussbaum Haus, Greenwich Village, Gregory Baldwin, Helmut Jahn, Joseph Peri, Junior Achievement, jury, Ken Fisher, Ken Greenberg, manhattan, Mansueto Library, Massachusetts, matthew berman, Michael Stepner, Nantucket, New York City, Osnabrück, PlaNYC, San Diego, Tom Angotti, Toronto, University of Chicago, Urban Land Institute, Village Alliance, Walking Home, West 8th Street, William Kelley, zoning
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Wednesday, May 4th, 2011
Thomas Balsley will design the landscapes for the new Gotham West development in Hell’s Kitchen; Houzz visited a stunning Nantucket cottage designed by Matthew Berman; The Lee, a green supportive housing center designed by Colin Cathcart, opened on Manhattan’s Lower East Side; Elle Decor chatted with Board Member Winka Dubbeldam about her 12 “must-haves”; Ron Harwick’s JHP participated in the Edgewood/Candler Park MARTA charrette in Atlanta, re-imagining the area around a subway station in the southern metropolis as a Transit Oriented Development; Green Source featured a case study of Patron Steven Holl’s Vanke Center (aka the Horizontal Skyscraper) in Shenzhen; William Kelley introduced his agenda as the new Director of the Village Alliance BID in New York with an article in The Villager; Board Member Enrique Norten (whose Guggenheim Guadalajara—pictured at left—was recently called one of the best museums never built) unveiled designs for not one, but two sleek new buildings in DC’s West End; Donald Stastny was selected to lead a design competition re-imagining Waller Creek area in Austin; and Michael Stepner cheered the development of a long-term regional plan for San Diego in the Union-Tribune.
Tags: Architecture, Atlanta, Austin, California, Candler Park, charrette, Colin Cathcart, competition, Development, Donald Stastny, Edgewood, Elle Decor, Enrique Norten, Gotham West, green buildings, Greenwich Village, Guadalajara, Guggenheim, Hell's Kitchen, Hells, horizontal skyscraper, Housing, landscape architecture, lower east side, manhattan, MARTA, matthew berman, Mexico, Michael Stepner, museum, must-haves, Nantucket, New York City, regional plan, Ron Harwick, San Diego, Shenzhen, Steven Holl, TEN Arquitectos, Texas, Thomas Balsley, Transit Oriented Development, Vanke Center, Village Alliance, Waller Creek, washington dc, West End, William Kelley, Winka Dubbeldam
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