What was lost in the process was harder to quantify: the density of small businesses, the overlapping networks of suppliers and customers, the informal economic relationships that give neighborhoods ...
As technology reduces the time needed to complete tasks, firms need to clarify what clients are actually paying for: ...
As technology reduces the time needed to complete tasks, firms need to clarify what clients are actually paying for: expertise and judgment, not billable hours. As technology reduces the time needed ...
On the importance of drawing: “We’re all part of the digital world to some extent, but there’s now an entire generation of ...
Can Mayor Mamdani forge a new path forward for New York City and the nation?
Fast forward to the present, and home prices have not gone down but up, and people are still desperate to own one, making ...
We have evolved to interpret places by scanning them to understand them: looking for patterns, movement, signs of life or ...
Highlights from Episode 5 of Our Buildings, Our Selves.
Nearly 30 years ago, Nicholas Lemann wrote the first widely read book about the “Great Migration”—the movement between 1916 and 1970 of more than 6 million African Americans from poverty and ...
It may shock some people to hear this, but architecture is not urban planning. It is not transportation planning, sociology, political science, or critical geography. However, architecture, new-build ...
Every architect understands that an ethically challenged client or project can imperil a practice. Perhaps apropos of this: The design for Donald Trump’s $200 million White House ballroom, renderings ...
In the most recent NBA season, the Brooklyn Nets finished well out of playoff contention. It was more than a year after the team lost three superstars who briefly brought buzz, and championship hopes, ...
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