The Architects Who, After a Devastating Earthquake, Rebuilt a Town
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/15/t-magazine/jojutla-mexico-earthquake-architecture.html
The domed interior of the Mexico City-based architect Alberto Kalach’s Santa Cruz Chapel one of several new projects reviving Jojutla, Mexico crafted from rust-pigmented concrete with an altar in parota wood.Credit.Rafael Gamo
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The Architects Who, After a Devastating Earthquake, Rebuilt a Town
Jojutla, Mexico, now home to an array of inventively reimagined public spaces, has become a paradigm for rural revitalization.
The domed interior of the Mexico City-based architect Alberto Kalach’s Santa Cruz Chapel one of several new projects reviving Jojutla, Mexico crafted from rust-pigmented concrete with an altar in parota wood.Credit.Rafael Gamo
The T List: Five Things We Recommend This Week
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/11/t-magazine/yuri-shimojo-mister-juis.html
Jewelry carved from bone, a cookbook from a beloved restaurant and more.
March 11, 2021
Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we’re sharing things we’re eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now.
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By Michaela Trimble
Designed by the Mexican Modernist architect and urbanist Mario Pani as a private residence, Casa Pani a 1960s-era, single-family
home in the lively Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City has recently opened as a six-bedroom guesthouse. Reimagined by the Los Angeles-based architect Miggi Hood, alongside her business partners Yola Jimenez, of Yola Mezcal, and the entrepreneur Marie Cazalaa, the property is an amalgam of the old and the new: The original three-story building, which was completed in 1962, connects to another three-story structure