Results for emerging voices
From the Architectural League
The Art of Running an Architecture Firm
Katherine Hogan Architects has developed inventive tactics to thrive as a small practice and serve its Raleigh, North Carolina, community.
On the Border between Architecture and Object
The founders of LANZA Atelier discuss the role of scale in their work, which ranges from furniture to buildings.
Colloqate
Ana Miljački speaks with Bryan Lee about design justice and challenging the architectural status quo.
Urban Omnibus is The Architectural League’s online publication dedicated to observing, understanding, and shaping the city.
From Urban Omnibus
Roundup — July 4th Edition
A special edition of the Roundup looks at urban renewal area visions, eminent domain to stem foreclosures, reinventing the MTA, an emergency housing prototype, a rent freeze unfrozen, a new timeline for Atlantic Yards, Urban Giants, and Rockaway!
Flux City
Chris Reed shares work from a Harvard GSD landscape architecture studio that considers how productive ecologies drive the development of urban form and uses Jamaica Bay as a case study for exploring the opportunities of richly fluid territories.
Studio Report: The Good Old Days
Daniel D'Oca shares student work that proposes creative ways to improve seniors' comfort, mobility, safety, and happiness to support aging in place.
The Omnibus Roundup – Taking Vision 2020 to Task, Definitive Central Park Guide, NYC’s Chief Digital Officer and Infrastructural Opportunism
LACK OF VISION 2020? Diving deep into the politics behind the "sixth borough," Tom Angotti takes Vision 2020 to task in a Gotham Gazette editorial questioning the bucolic wetland preservation and public recreation envisioned in the waterfront plan. "Behind the frothy rhetoric designed to garner public support, Vision...
The Omnibus Roundup – Trams, Ferries, Subways, Weeksville & the Queen of the Pop-up Plaza
After this morning's F train delays, the reopening of the Roosevelt Island tram will come as even more of a relief to the island's commuters. The iconic cherry-red tram will again grace Manhattan skies after a 9-month hiatus, during which it underwent $25 million...
In Anthology: Crown Heights, Staging the Weight of History
From riots to gentrification, a new production reflects on the evolution of the central Brooklyn neighborhood through oral history, dance, and music. Samuel Feldblum asks, when aggregating narratives, whose story is actually being told?