Archinect
The A+D blogging platform with a built-in audience.
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  • Not shown for clarity
    By Vatjaiswal: I am from Canada but currently traveling in Valencia, Spain. I will be traveling to Brazil, Taiwan and South Korea for the entire upcoming year, exploring the architecture and urban planning of major cities in these countries. My blog will focus on comparing architecture in different parts of the world, accompanied by photographs and videos. I would also like to write about how culture influences architecture of these places.
    Archinect seems like a great place to start and share my ideas!
    Not shown for clarity
     
  • Untitled_WIP - A Student Blog by Jordan Laurila
    By Laurila: Details, impressions, and all those in between memories deserve a voice. It just so happens architecture school has given me a lot of those. I am a 3-Year Masters of Architecture student at Taubman College at the University of Michigan, and we'll see where this gets us.
    University of Michigan
    Untitled_WIP
     
  • Yale School of Architecture (onepairofpants)
     
  • Our architecture projects in Indonesia
    By WCParchitect: We are an architecture firm called Wastu Cipta Parama from Bandung, Indonesia.

    This blog is contained of projects that we have made. Please have take a look and we're looking forward for your comments.
    Our architecture projects in Indonesia
     
  • The Familiar Typology - The Suburbs of London, Tokyo and Buenos Aires
    By nugent_denise_: As part of the Cavin Family Traveling Scholarship, this blog aims to research the suburban condition as they exist in different contexts: London, England; Tokyo, Japan; and Buenos Aires, Argentina. The prolificacy of suburbia, internationally, serves as a physical archive of domestic norms, political ambitions and topographical responses. This research seeks to decipher how cultural and historical standards have formalized themselves within the familiar context of the suburban home.
    The Familiar Typology
     
  • Roger Williams University
     
  • The Psychology of Architecture and Design
    By dennisleigh: This blog is about the interdependence of our state of mind and the built environment. Different life experiences can be turned into metaphors and then, transformed into shapes and colors that affect how we live our lives.
    The Psychology of Architecture and Design
     
  • National University of Singapore (Tan)
     
  • University of Illinois Chicago (Catlan)
    By cfearo2: A blog from the UIC School of Architecture. Read this to stay up to date with school events, some things going on in the area, an update of what shenanigans the faculty and students are up to, and posts about cool design from all over.
    University of Illinois Chicago
    University of Illinois Chicago (Catlan)
     
  • Constellations of Tijuana
    By Orhan Ayyüce: Constellations of Tijuana:
    A research study in Urbanism
    Old stories, new finds, physical and fictional speculations
    Studies of various grid collisions and political ideologies
    Planned and spontaneous explorations
    Creative and generative recording and the study of the city

    ELA, Escuela Libre De Arquitectura
    Tijuana, Mexico
    June - August 2017
    Orhan Ayyüce
    Constellations of Tijuana
     
  • Photography
    By Anton Romashov: Capturing architecture on a film camera
    Photography
     
  • Modern Architectural Photography - Musings Photographic
    By Jeremy Segal: A place to inform, discuss and display current architectural photography and to connect with lovers of digital photography and design. Showcase architects and their work through the display of skilfully crafted, beautifully artistic photography. Discuss and exchange ideas on photographic trends and techniques as they pertain to the architectural industry.
    Modern Architectural Photography
     
  • University of Oregon College of Design
     
  • ArchViz - Architecture Visualization, Conceptual Design, Collective Experience
    By hanafi muhamads: The entire unfolding of the plot is a philosophical exploration of all the consequences of that idea – art, architecture and design

    It will start with this, as well as spreading my ideas and exploration in design. the blog will slowly be filled as my career goes on till the day i becoming professional architect
    MARA University of Technology
    ArchViz
     
  • Live Blog - AIA 2013 Spring Conference "Regional Modernism"
    By Alvin Huang, AIA, NOMA, Deepika Padam:
    Live Blog - AIA 2013 Spring Conference "Regional Modernism"
     
  • The Vacuum - Architecture and Criticism
    By rucara: Go through your favorites architectural daily sources, pass the vacuum, open the Vacuum Bag and voila! we will have enough provocative material to start political, cultural, philosophical and sustainable discussion regarding postmodernism trends in architecture terminology. A several blog entries that will try to filter some current overrated architectural terminologies such as Public Space,or the most common: Green Strategies.
    The Vacuum
     
  • Sci-ARC, Making+Meaning (Brian Ha)
     
  • Greener Grass - Exploring the black box of real estate
    By amlocke: Greener Grass documents the lessons and experiences learned as a former architecture student studying real estate at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. It seeks to share real-time insight into the industry, forging a better understanding for architects about what makes the project tick.
    Harvard University
    Greener Grass
     
  • China Builds - Mainland China's only English MArch program
    By Martijn de Geus, EPMA Program, KateMontry, Reva Watson: In the School of Architecture at Tsinghua University, Beijing, the English Program for Master Architecture (EPMA) provides a nationally accredited post-professional program in integrated architectural design. It combines a global network with local implementation. The program is focused on the construction of the human habitat, and the application of advanced building technologies.
    Tsinghua University
    China Builds
     
  • Nightmare job - working for a Diva/o
    By ohhh_architecture: Needing to vent? and maybe get some outside perspective...I sure do. And yes, one should be grateful to have a job! (but at a sweatshop?)

    Disclaimer: My first blog, will not respond to hurtful/negative remarks, will delete if I can, might answer some questions....will not disclose personal or professional details,....we are all learning this game...different strokes for different folks, be nice =)

    These post are intended to reflect on recent experiences, and hopefully gain some insight
    Nightmare job
     
  • Architectstasy - Architectural Criticism
    By Jessica A.S. Letaw: Architectstasy is a resource for the current, past, and projected built environments of Ann Arbor, SE Michigan, the U.S., and occasionally the world. Jessica A.S. Letaw and invited critics present critical readings of the city's trajectories that are situated within architectural discourse as well as news that is pertinent to residents and citizens.
    Architectstasy
     
  • Elemental Urbanism
    By James Pereira: I often wonder if all cities should be shaped like Rome; a city that is enourmous yet walkable with all paths leading to monumental icons. Many major cities now look as merely a cemetery of parts; buildings, gridded streets, and parks creating a cityscape of cluster. Even an individual apartment building can be looked at similarly to a microscopic level. This is due to evolution, program, and constraints which alltogether create elements that limit possibility.
    Elemental Urbanism
     
  • The University of Tokyo (Christopher) - G30 Architecture & Urbanism - Obuchi Lab
    By Christopher Sjoberg: The G30 is an English language, architecture and urbanism course offered through the University of Tokyo for foreign students. Led by former AA Design Research Lab Co-Director, Associate Professor Yusuke Obuchi, the program seeks to collaboratively advance architectural and urban design research through the symbiosis of digital technologies and material development.
    University of Tokyo
    The University of Tokyo (Christopher)
     
  • Density - Finding solution for a massive problem.
    By Ricardo Amaya: Rapid world growth and urbanization is not allowing cities to adapt and provide for their inhabitants. Towns are quickly growing into cities, and some of the densest places in the world are comprised of makeshift homes, otherwise referred to as slums. Furthermore, already overcrowded cities have to absorb people leaving their rural hometown in hope of job opportunities. There are currently over 1 billion slum dwellers in the world. This number is expected to reach 2 billion by the year 2030.
    Density
     




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