• Alex Bozikovic
    @alex_bozikovic
    Alex Bozikovic is a Toronto based writer and editor for the Globe and Mail and frequent Dwell contributor. While interviewing Studio Junction's Christine Ho Ping Kong and Peter Tan, the architect-residents of the Courtyard House, he was impressed by the couple's remarkable DIY chutzpah and became inspired to try a major project himself. Someday. Maybe.
  • Sarah Amelar
    @sarah_amelar
    While reporting on Hadley and Peter Arnold's Canyon House, writer and architect Sarah Amelar got to rub shoulders–or rather wings and fins–with the family's menagerie: three dogs, a cat, two rabbits, two birds and a fish. Amerlar also attended the world premiere of The Mystery of the Two Sisters, an original play staged in the courtyard by Arnolds' daughter and her friends.
  • Baumann Architecture
    @baumann_architecture
    Philippe Baumann founded Baumann Architecture PLLC in 2000, an architectural design studio with interests ranging from competitions to urban infill to global urbanism. The studio has extensive experience building in the City of New York, with projects currently under construction such as the innovative steel-sheathed Courtyard House in Gowanus and a zero-energy brownstone in Brooklyn.
  • Nancy Nenni
    @EventSpaceM3
    M3 Studios is the place for all your event venue space needs. We are a unique event venue space because we also double as a professional film studio. We have 7 sound stages, courtyard areas, and outside spaces that can accommodate small or even the largest of events. M3 Studios is here for all of your event venue needs. With over 60,000 sq ft no event is too big or too small for our unique event venues. Let yourself be creative and create an environment your guests will love. https://m3studiosmiami.com/event-venue/
  • Studio Daniel Libeskind
    @studiodaniellibeskind
    Born in postwar Poland, Daniel Libeskind immigrated to America with his family becoming an American citizen in 1964. He studied music in Israel and later became a virtuoso performer in New York. He left music to study architecture, receiving his professional architectural degree in 1970 from Cooper Union, then earned a postgraduate degree in History and Theory of Architecture at the School of Comparative Studies at Essex University (England) in 1971. Daniel Libeskind established his architectural studio in Berlin, Germany in 1989 after winning the competition to build the Jewish Museum in Berlin. In February 2003, Studio Daniel Libeskind moved its headquarters from Berlin to New York City when Daniel Libeskind was selected as the master planner for the World Trade Center redevelopment. Among the many Libeskind buildings that have received worldwide acclaim are The Felix Nussbaum Haus, in Osnabrück, Germany (1998), the Imperial War Museum North in Manchester, England (2002), the extension to the Denver Art Museum and the Denver Art Museum Residences (2006), the Royal Ontario Museum (2007) and the Glass Courtyard, an extension to the Jewish Museum Berlin, (2007), the Ascent at Roebling’s Bridge, a residential high-rise in Covington, Kentucky (2008), the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco (2008), and Westside, Europe’s largest retail and health center, located in Bern, Switzerland (2008). In 2012, Studio Libeskind Design was established in Milan, Italy, to focus on product and industrial design. To date, Libeskind Design has developed products for companies in Austria, Canada, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Poland, Spain, Turkey, and the United States