Collection by Joanne Beattie
Skylights bring in natural light, making the cozy bath feel spacious and bright.
Skylights bring in natural light, making the cozy bath feel spacious and bright.
The primary bath features a large clawfoot tub and offers direct outdoor access.
The primary bath features a large clawfoot tub and offers direct outdoor access.
Oxman’s Krebs Cycle of Creativity (2016) represents what she calls “four domains of creative exploration” in which “one realm can incite (r)evolution inside another.”
Oxman’s Krebs Cycle of Creativity (2016) represents what she calls “four domains of creative exploration” in which “one realm can incite (r)evolution inside another.”
Ein Stein Tea House is located at Museum Insel Hombroich in Neuss, Germany, on the grounds of a disused NATO missile base.
Ein Stein Tea House is located at Museum Insel Hombroich in Neuss, Germany, on the grounds of a disused NATO missile base.
Archtober, a month-long tribute to architecture and design in New York, is turning 10—and the Center for Architecture has put together an impressive mix of in-person and digital tours, exhibitions, and events across all five boroughs for this year’s iteration. "Building of the Day," the long-popular architect-led tours, are now going virtual, and will include Little Island by Heatherwick Studio, the Marcel Breuer Buildings at the Bronx Community College, the High Line by James Corner Field Operations, and the Staten Island Museum at Snug Harbor by Gluckman Tang Architects. New Yorkers who would rather escape the city for a spell should consider the three-hour tour of Art Omi Sculpture & Architecture Park in Ghent, in the Hudson Valley, led by architecture director Warren James, or a tour of Steven Holl Architects’ the Ex of In House in Rhinebeck.
Archtober, a month-long tribute to architecture and design in New York, is turning 10—and the Center for Architecture has put together an impressive mix of in-person and digital tours, exhibitions, and events across all five boroughs for this year’s iteration. "Building of the Day," the long-popular architect-led tours, are now going virtual, and will include Little Island by Heatherwick Studio, the Marcel Breuer Buildings at the Bronx Community College, the High Line by James Corner Field Operations, and the Staten Island Museum at Snug Harbor by Gluckman Tang Architects. New Yorkers who would rather escape the city for a spell should consider the three-hour tour of Art Omi Sculpture & Architecture Park in Ghent, in the Hudson Valley, led by architecture director Warren James, or a tour of Steven Holl Architects’ the Ex of In House in Rhinebeck.
Ruha Benjamin, professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, followed up her first book, People’s Science: Bodies and Rights on the Stem Cell Frontier with Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code. During an online lecture (September 23) organized by SCI-Arc, she will highlight examples of "discriminatory design" and introduce guests to a socially conscious approach to tech development. The following week (September 30), Charles L. Davis II, designer, architectural historian, and cultural critic at the School of Architecture and Planning at SUNY Buffalo, will unveil a darker side of Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright’s romanticized Midwestern prairie life in "American Architecture is a Settler Colonial Project: Locating the Racial Politics of Modern Architectural Style."
Ruha Benjamin, professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, followed up her first book, People’s Science: Bodies and Rights on the Stem Cell Frontier with Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code. During an online lecture (September 23) organized by SCI-Arc, she will highlight examples of "discriminatory design" and introduce guests to a socially conscious approach to tech development. The following week (September 30), Charles L. Davis II, designer, architectural historian, and cultural critic at the School of Architecture and Planning at SUNY Buffalo, will unveil a darker side of Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright’s romanticized Midwestern prairie life in "American Architecture is a Settler Colonial Project: Locating the Racial Politics of Modern Architectural Style."
The apartment's next-door neighbors include not just an old gondola shipyard, but also the elegant San Trovaso church, rebuilt in 1584 after originally being consecrated in 1028.
The apartment's next-door neighbors include not just an old gondola shipyard, but also the elegant San Trovaso church, rebuilt in 1584 after originally being consecrated in 1028.
Case Terrosa floor plan
Case Terrosa floor plan