ArchitectureWeek
HOME   |   DESIGN   |   PEOPLE & PLACES   |   CONTEXT   |   CULTURE   |   TECHNOLOGY   |   SEARCH
  Topics Index
Places Index
Architects Index
Authors Index

Departments
  •  Design and Building News
  •  Design Articles
  •  Building Articles
  •  Digital Design Tools
  •  Environment Articles
  •  Building Culture Articles
  •  Architectural Products Articles
  •  Classic Home Collection
  •  Patterns of Home
  •  Postcards to ArchitectureWeek
  •  Green Architecture
  •  Historic Preservation
    Green Focus
  •  Global Warming and Climate Change
  •  Architecture 2030
  •  Passive House
  •  Reskinning
  •  Solar Design
  •  Passive Solar Design
  •  Photovoltaics
  •  Green Roofs
  •  Sustainable Design and Building
  •  LEED - Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
  •  LEED Certified
  •  LEED Gold Certified
  •  LEED Platinum Certified
    Building Types - Residential
  •  Houses of Architects
  •  Additions
  •  Apartments
  •  Condominiums
  •  Bungalows
  •  Castles
  •  Designers' Own Houses
  •  Houses, Large and Small
  •  Large Houses
  •  Small Houses
  •  Mixed Use Buildings
  •  Multi-Family Housing
  •  Palaces
    Building Types - Public and Civic
  •  Academic and Schools
  •  Airport Terminals
  •  Art Galleries and Museums
  •  Bridges
  •  Cathedrals
  •  Churches
  •  Community Centers
  •  Courthouses
  •  Environmental Education Centers
  •  Exhibition and Exposition
  •  Gardens
  •  Government Buildings
  •  Landscape Architecture
  •  Libraries
  •  Monuments and Memorials
  •  Mosques
  •  Museums
  •  Parks and Parking
  •  Plazas and Piazzas
  •  Stadiums
  •  Schools
  •  Temples
  •  Theaters
  •  Town and City Halls
  •  Town and City Planning
  •  Urban Design and Planning
  •  Land Use and Transportation Planning
  •  Environmental Planning
    Building Types - Commerical
  •  Bank Buildings
  •  Commercial Architecture
  •  Factory Buildings
  •  Hotels and Inns
  •  Laboratory Buildings
  •  Health Care Buildings
  •  Mixed Use Buildings
  •  Office Buildings
  •  Parks and Parking
  •  Cafes and Restaurants
  •  Retail Design
  •  Skyscrapers
    Architectural Topics
  •  Adaptive Reuse
  •  Architecture Awards and Prizes
  •  Architecture and Video
  •  Professional Practice Issues in Architecture and Building
  •  Marketing for Building Design Professionals
  •  Professional Liability in Architecture and Building
  •  Katrina and Gulf Coast
  •  World Trade Center
  •  The Pentagon
  •  In Memorium
  •  Some Architecture with Curves
  •  The Facade
  •  The Orders
  •  Some Organic Architecture
  •  Public Art
  •  Daylighting
    New Media Focus
  •  Architectural Wikis
  •  Architectural Web Sites
  •  Architectural CAD
    Architectural Styles
  •  Egyptian Architecture
  •  Greek Architecture
  •  Roman Architecture
  •  Medieval Architecture
  •  Georgian Architecture
  •  Gothic Architecture
  •  Hindu Architecture
  •  Islamic Architecture
  •  Romanesque Architecture
  •  Japanese Architecture
  •  Byzantine Architecture
  •  The Doric Order
  •  The Ionic Order
  •  The Corinthian Order
  •  Baroque Architecture
  •  Victorian Architecture
  •  Art Nouveau Architecture
  •  Art Deco Architecture
  •  Arts and Crafts Architecture
  •  Broadly Classical Architecture
  •  Neo-Classical Architecture
  •  Early Modern Architecture
  •  Prairie Style Architecture
  •  Modern around the World
  •  Expressionist Modern Architecture
  •  Deconstructivist Modern
  •  Expressionist Architecture
  •  Post Modern Architecture
  •  High Tech Modern Architecture
  •  Vernacular Around the World
  •  Neo-Vernacular
    Construction Types
  •  Bearing Masonry Construction
  •  Brick Construction
  •  Cut Stone Masonry Construction
  •  Concrete Construction
  •  Curtain Wall Construction
  •  Fabric & Tensile Construction
  •  Geodesic Construction
  •  Glass in Construction
  •  Light Wood Frame Construction
  •  Steel Construction
  •  Timber Construction
  •  Remodeling
    Climates
  •  In Temperate Climates
  •  In an Alpine Climate
  •  In a Mild Temperate Climate
  •  In a Cold Temperate Climate
  •  In a Desert Climate
  •  In a Warm Temperate Climate
  •  In a Hot, Humid or Subtropical Climate
  •  In a Tropical Climate
    Architectural Contexts
  •  Infill Development
  •  In an Campus Context
  •  In a Hill or Cliffside Context
  •  In a Mountain Context
  •  In a Riverside Context
  •  In an Rural Context
  •  In a Small Town or City Context
  •  In a Suburban Context
  •  In an Urban Context
  •  In an Village Context
  •  In a Waterfront Context
    Architecural Elements
  •  Arches
  •  Courtyards
  •  Domes
  •  Stairways
  •  Vaulting
  •  A Range of Rooms in ArchWeek
  • Concrete Construction - 26
    Concrete Construction page: [prev] | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | 06 | 07 | 08 | 09 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | [next]

    ArchWeek Image

    AIR-FORMED CONCRETE DOMES

    Throughout history, structurally efficient domes have been built from masonry, wood, concrete, and even ice. But there's still plenty of room left in dome technology for invention and construction efficiency. New ways to form, reinforce, and insulate "air-formed" concrete domes have been a primary focus of my architectural practice for about 25 years. — Published 2003.0122

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    ANDO'S NEW MODERN

    The opening of a new building designed by world-renowned architect Tadao Ando of Osaka, Japan at the end of 2002 marked the 110th anniversary of The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. With 53,000 square feet (4,900 square meters) of gallery space, the new structure for "The Modern," as it is known by locals, is Ando's largest commission in the United States to date. — Published 2003.0115

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    HOUSING BY HOLL

    A new dormitory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology seems tailor-made for the school's super-geek culture. The building by Steven Holl has been compared variously to a giant Rubik's Cube and a 1950s computer punch card. — Published 2002.1120

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    IKEA THREATENS BREUER ICON

    On November 7, 2002, the Board of Aldermen of the City of New Haven, Connecticut voted to approve a development proposal from IKEA, an international retailer of designer furnishings. IKEA proposes to build a major new store on an industrial landfill site known as Long Wharf, bringing much-needed jobs and tax revenue to the city. However, unless IKEA changes its current plans, construction of the facility's parking lot will result in the demolition of a substantial part of the Pirelli Building, designed by Marcel Breuer in 1969 for the Armstrong Tire Company. — Published 2002.1113

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    THEATRICAL CONSCIOUSNESS

    The newly opened Mondavi Center, for music, dance, and theater, is part of a master plan for the University of California at Davis aimed at creating a new image for the campus. Overcoming the special challenges of designing "green" in a performing arts center, BOORA Architects and Arup engineers have made the building a model of sustainability. — Published 2002.1106

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    BASICS - CLAY TILE ROOFING

    Tile roofing accommodates various building traditions and climatic conditions, and it now accounts for over eight percent of the residential steep-slope roofing market in the United States for new construction and about three percent for reroofing. And in much of the world, earthy, fire-safe, long-lasting tile is the dominant roofing material. — Published 2002.1030

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    APARTMENTS OUTSIDE THE BOX

    There has been a recent growth spurt of highrise apartment development along Manhattan's avenues. Although these buildings strengthen street-level pedestrian activity, replacing congested parking lots with shops and restaurants, their predictable appearance means that the population of New York is being denied high-quality design. — Published 2002.1016

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    MUSEUM OF GLASS BY ARTHUR ERICKSON

    Amid a scruffy sprawl of warehouses and marinas, on a former brownfield site in Tacoma, Washington, sits the sparkling new Museum of Glass. Subtitled the International Center for Contemporary Art, this is the most recent hope for reviving Tacoma's lackluster downtown core.

    The 75,000-square-foot (7000-square-meter), $63 million project was designed by the preeminent Canadian architect Arthur Erickson in collaboration with Nick Milkovich Architects Inc., of Vancouver, British Columbia, and Thomas Cook Reed Reinvald, of Tacoma. — Published 2002.1009

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    WIMBLEDON PARK SLIM

    A house with the unassuming name "84 Arthur Road" has introduced an element of drama to an otherwise sleepy suburb of southwest London. At first glance, the new house seems to contrast sharply with its 1900s-vintage suburban neighbors. — Published 2002.0918

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    KAHN'S YALE UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY

    The Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven, Connecticut (1951-53) was the first significant commission of Louis Kahn and his first architectural masterpiece. Historians Kenneth Frampton and Vincent Scully consider this work Kahn's response to the desire for a new monumentality in the post-World War II period. — Published 2002.0710

    Continue...

    Concrete Construction page: [prev] | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | 06 | 07 | 08 | 09 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | [next]

     

    IN THIS ISSUE
     Contents/RSS
    Environment
    Foundations of Passive House
    Culture
    Corbu's Maison Ternisien
    Culture
    People & Places

    AND MORE
      Current Contents
      People & Places
      Blog Center
      Book Center
      Download Center
      New Products
      Products Guide
      Classic Home
      Calendar
      Competitions
      Conferences
      Events & Exhibits
      Architecture Forum
      Architects Directory
      Topics Library
      Complete Archive
      Web Directory
      About ArchWeek
      Search
      Subscribe & Contribute
      Free Newsletters
       


     
    QUIZ

    Current Issue Contents

      Special thanks to our sustaining subscribers offering Spring Door Hinges and Corporate Gifts.

    Send this to a friend       Subscribe       Contribute       Media Kit       Privacy       Comments
    ARCHWEEK   |   GREAT BUILDINGS   |   ARCHIPLANET   |   DISCUSSION   |   BOOKS   |   BLOGS   |   SEARCH
    ArchitectureWeek.com/
    © 2006-2012 Artifice, Inc. - All Rights Reserved