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  • Architecture 2013 – 2104, Part 3:  Miami’s Triumph, Sandy’s Lessons, Green Gains

    Architecture 2013 – 2104, Part 3: Miami’s Triumph, Sandy’s Lessons, Green Gains

    Flamboyant museum architecture has largely fallen by the wayside in America and in much of Europe in 2013, but thrives in the global hubs of new wealth in Asia and the Middle East. France (largely by coincidence) is an exception in 2014. Coop Himmelblau’s Musée des Confluences, a Sci-Fi creature of pistoning columns and bent Read more

  • Architecture 2013 – 2014, Part 2 Parklets Aren’t a Panacea

    Architecture 2013 – 2014, Part 2 Parklets Aren’t a Panacea

    In the big-city hubs of innovation, the streets got cleaner and safer, and decent supermarkets opened in 2013. In New York City the gentrifiers cleared tenants (many low and middle-income) from blocks of brownstones in order to create multi-million dollar, 10,000-square-foot single-family homes. Though Occupy Wall Street has faded from memory, the income inequality it Read more

  • Architecture 2013 – 2014:  Wealth Transforms the City

    Architecture 2013 – 2014: Wealth Transforms the City

    At the Queens West megadevelopment, which had largely languished since a building spree in the late 1990s, half a dozen hulking towers bristling with sharp-edged balconies lurch drunkenly down Center Boulevard. Many of these hit the market in 2013, a year that saw New York City’s residential real-estate market — at least at the high Read more

  • NY Times “Invisible Child” Is Not a Victim of Inequality

    NY Times “Invisible Child” Is Not a Victim of Inequality

    If you have not read the “Invisible Child” series in the New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/projects/2013/invisible-child/#/?chapt=1), you will find the story of a plucky child, Dasani, heartbreaking and riveting. She lives with her siblings in a homeless shelter  It is exquisitely written by Andrea Elliott. I wish Elliott had not framed her story with income inequality. Read more

  • Businesses Aren’t Sustainability Leaders if They Don’t Take a Climate Change Stand

    Is business ready to act to mitigate climate change? That wasn’t clear — at least in the Midwest — from a panel I moderated at a conference hosted by the national American Sustainable Business Council with the local Business Alliance for a Sustainable Economy. Coincidentally, the panel convened on Sept. 27, the day the latest Read more

  • Folk Art Reprieve Saves MoMA’s Ass

    Folk Art Reprieve Saves MoMA’s Ass

    A couple of hours after my previous post, MoMA announced that it had hired Diller Scofidio & Renfro to design its planned addition to the museum. The museum accepted DS&R’s request to “carefully consider the entirety of the site, including the former American Folk Art Museum building.” DS&R have inoculated director Glen Lowry from continued Read more