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Neue Nationalgalerie reopens after surgical restoration by David Chipperfield
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Dezeen announces contributors to Dezeen 15 festival
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Architecture and the future of Earth
On Earth Day, we dig into Beatrice Galilee’s new book, to see how architecture can help - but also harm - our world
The way we build things is going to change. That’s the clear message from Beatrice Galilee’s bold new book, Radical Architecture of the Future. This new title takes in some of the most promising, innovative and startling responses to the way mankind shapes the planet. Far from limiting the title to simple house building, the book takes in tech, art, agriculture, sex and protest, to truly question how we make our built environment, and how we might make it better. Of course, many of these future schemes focus on our natural environment, and on Earth Day, we’d like to share a few of these.
Frieze x Melbourne Design Week present Museums as Agents of Change | | Galleries
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“I am a Scotsman,” Sir Walter Scott once wrote; “therefore I had to fight my way into the world.” This list explains how these 14 buildings fought their way onto Scottish soil.
Earlier versions of the descriptions of these buildings first appeared in 1001 Buildings You Must See Before You Die
, edited by Mark Irving (2016). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.
Craigievar Castle
If there is one castle that typifies the jaggedly romantic outline of the traditional Scottish tower house, it is Craigievar Castle in Aberdeenshire. With its jumble of oversailing gables and turrets emphasizing an uncompromising verticality, it wears the ceremonial dress of warlike display rather than the armor of battle. Bristling with features such as corbelling and fictive cannons, it was built to look fortified at a time when the need for serious defensive protection had largely passed but when the prestige associated with military endeavor was still deeply embe