Architecture & Design Archives | Page 23 of 28 | CREtech
after building the first permitted 3D printed
Fisher Brothers didn’t expect to spin off a hospitality brand two years ago. At the time, the firm was vet...
New York–based real estate company
Jerry Sweeney, President, CEO, and Trustee of Brandywine Realty Trust joins The Legends to discuss the qualities he’s honed through his years of successful leadership, how he balances risk with innovation, and how the industry will need to utilize technology in new ways going forward.
The shiny, onyx-colored building appears alien in its drab, postindustrial Philadelphia neighborhood—the love child of a “D-volt battery and the Death Star,” as one local architecture critic put it, admiringly.
Once upon a time, the idea of 3D-printed homes felt like a thing of the future. But as housing gets less and less affordable — especially in ultra-expensive markets such as the Bay Area — companies are getting creative in their quest to build more affordable homes using technology.
Within eyesight of drivers on I-5 in Federal Way, Washington, a celebrated exemplar of modernist landscape architecture and building design peeks out from a forest of evergreens. Like a skyscraper turned on its side, the building appears to be a low concrete bridge stretching across the landscape. The long horizontal tiers of its five floors are draped in ivy and overlook...
In Volume 4 of our workplace research we identify the process and team members necessary to determine how much space companies will need as they plan their future real estate needs. This report provides insight from some of our key industry partners.
Last week, longtime Chicago Tribune architecture Blair Kamin announced that his last day at the paper would be January 15. Over the past 28 years, Kamin built a sterling reputation as one of the leading architectural critics in the world. But Kamin took a buyout from the cost-cutting publication, bringing his tenure to an end. That leaves the country’s third largest city with...
When a new elevated highway was built in New Orleans in the 1960s, like other “urban renewal” projects in the U.S., it ripped through a predominantly Black neighborhood that had been thriving. Hundreds of homes were razed. Hundreds of businesses were lost. On Claiborne Avenue, the central boulevard in the neighborhood, hundreds of oak trees were torn out of a wide median that neighbors had use...