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ArchitecturalRecord.com: Daily Headlines
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The resource for architecture and architects.
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Seismic Training Efforts Help Haitians Help Themselves
An old Chinese proverb sums up several projects that mark the dawn of seismic-resistant design and construction in earthquake-devastated Haiti: "If you give a person a fish, you feed that person for a day. If you teach a person to fish, you feed that person for a lifetime."
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Newsmaker: Henry Urbach
Henry Urbach Named Director of Philip Johnson's Glass House.
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A?maree?s
Haute Couture: A restaurant with a Modernist pedigree is rescued from the vintage bin, reborn a high-end clothier.
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AIA Chooses Sustainable Projects for Volunteer Program
The AIA's Sustainable Design Assessment Team (SDAT) has selected seven communities to receive pro bono design and planning services.
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Design Selected for AIDS Memorial Park in New York City
The AIDS Memorial Park organization, Architectural Record, and Architizer have announced the winner of a competition to design a memorial for victims of AIDS and an education center in Manhattan?s West Village, across from the now-closed St. Vincent?s hospital.
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How Do I Love You, Mr. Foster? Let Me Count the Buildings
Norberto López Amado and Carlos Carcas' documentary How Much Does Your Building Weigh, Mr. Foster?, currently playing in New York City, is a starry-eyed, unabashed love letter to one of the world's leading starchitects. It's also soulless hagiography.
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Revival on the Horizon for Historic Miami Marine Stadium
Today, the Miami City Commission is expected to give a nonprofit group the green light to rehabilitate Miami Marine Stadium, an abandoned Modernist landmark designed in 1963 by then 27-year-old Cuban-American architect Hilario Candela.
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Ellsworth Kelly and Peter Zellner Turn an L.A. Gallery Into Public Art
Ellsworth Kelly has been collaborating with architects since the 1950s. His latest project with Peter Zellner turns an L.A. gallery into public art.
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Imploding the Pruitt-Igoe Myth
A new documentary attempts to alter how we look at St. Louis's infamous public housing project.
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Havana: Bracing for a Boom
For decades, Havana has charmed foreigners who visited the Caribbean city well-known for its sultry music, world-class cigars, and cacharros, the vintage American automobiles imported to the country prior to the 1959 revolution.
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