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In Florida, Caplow Manzano designs first WELL-certified residence
Picture a house with no drywall and no visible wiring or ductwork. Rather, the plumbing and electrical systems are tucked away out of sight and accessed behind attractive wood paneling. The house you’re picturing is CM1, the first WELL-certified residence and a prototype for an innovative construction method dubbed “hypostruction” by its architects. The house
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USDA rolls out 2023 Plant Hardiness Zone Map
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West Hollywood could get an LED orb on Sunset Boulevard
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A visitor center is planned for Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic dome home
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AN asked DALL·E to realize Halloween houses by architects
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The Sphere opens in Las Vegas. What does it mean for architecture?
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What the Bernheimer Architecture Union learned from UTOPIA
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Cargill debuts wind-powered ocean liner with WindWings®
Modern architecture and ocean liners are close cousins, if not immediate siblings. A revolution in one discipline tends to signal that change is coming for the other. Continue reading on The Architect’s Newspaper The post Cargill debuts the world’s first ever wind-powered ocean liner with WindWings® appeared first on The Architect’s Newspaper.
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Never Alone explores five decades of video game history at MoMA
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Installation demonstrates the promise of a new degree at Penn
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San Francisco says Twitter needs permits for its office bedrooms
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Architects design cultural venues for a Silk Road metaverse
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Herzog & de Meuron debuts a new website
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A new website from BIG has us missing the early 2000s like whoa
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New renderings depict unbuilt Frank Lloyd Wright skyscrapers
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Why write about architecture? ChatGPT has ideas.
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Las Vegas helps us understand how virtual environments fall short
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Twitter’s newest office amenity is a bedroom
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This Revit plugin helps architects pick materials with less embodied carbon
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NASA awards ICON contract to continue research on lunar habitation