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
  • Museums - 02
    Museums page: [prev] | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | 06 | [next]

    ArchWeek Image

    ULM MÜNSTERPLATZ

    Just over 100 miles (170 kilometers) from Freiburg, Germany, the city of Ulm straddles the banks of the Danube River, and although the two cities' cathedral squares — Münsterplätze — have slightly different birthdates, they are virtual twins. They grew up over the same five-and-a-half centuries, only to be laid low in the same bombing raids of 1944. — Published 2010.0929

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    BECHTLER MUSEUM BY BOTTA

    Clad in a glazed terra cotta tile that lends it an orange hue and a sleek feel, the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art in Charlotte, North Carolina, shows Swiss architect Mario Botta shifting subtly from his signature brick and stone. — Published 2010.0217

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    CONNECTICUT SCIENCE CENTER BY PELLI

    The Connecticut Science Center is a new architectural showpiece in the city of Hartford, Connecticut, designed by Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects. The design expresses themes that have been part of Cesar Pelli's oeuvre for many years: the importance of public space and its role in the city. — Published 2009.1028

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    NAGASAKI ART MUSEUM

    The Nagasaki Prefectural Art Museum in Nagasaki, Japan, is one of Kengo Kuma's most successful designs in an urban setting.

    In this project, a small canal with flanking pedestrian promenades runs between two interconnected sections of the complex, bringing a part of the nearby sea, the port area, and the public realm of the city into the domain of the museum. — Published 2009.1014

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    PIANO IN CHICAGO

    Renzo Piano is known for his finely tuned designs, especially for a refined talent in dovetailing elegant new architecture with an existing context, playing on contextual strengths without duplicating the neighbors.

    He has achieved this feat once again at the Art Institute of Chicago, where a light-studded new museum wing by Piano opened in May 2009. The Art Institute's new addition is laudable in its intelligent siting, sensitive scale, urban presence, and manipulation of light. — Published 2009.0805

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    KOLUMBA ART MUSEUM

    In Cologne, Germany, a city ravaged by World War II, the Kolumba Art Museum embraces and preserves centuries of culture and pays poetic tribute to the layers of civilization unearthed on its site. Designed by reclusive Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, the museum provides a stunning exception to the city's drab urban landscape built after the war. — Published 2009.0107

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

    Renzo Piano demonstrates a mastery of light throughout his work. At the new California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, he exhibits the same care lighting a museum of the natural world as he has in lighting some of the world's finest art collections. — Published 2008.1112

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    CURRIER MUSEUM OF ART

    The Currier Museum of Art in Manchester, New Hampshire, reopened its doors in spring 2008 after an expansion designed by Ann Beha Architects. This was both a sympathetic and a very modern expansion, and the results provide quite an elegant increase in the museum's scope. — Published 2008.0917

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    SUNTORY MUSEUM BY KENGO KUMA

    Kengo Kuma strikes a chord when he talks about the inspirations for one of his most successful projects: the new Suntory Museum of Art, built in 2007 into the side of the new Tokyo Midtown development. — Published 2008.0903

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    NEWSEUM BY POLSHEK

    The Newseum building by Polshek Partnership Architects adds vitality and a sense of time and place to Pennsylvania Avenue, a street that, like so many important streets in Washington, D.C., had been devoid of movement and three-dimensionality in massing.

    A museum about news, the aptly named Newseum moved from across the Potomac River, in Arlington, Virginia, where it had outgrown its space. Its parent organization, the Freedom Forum, sought a location more heavily frequented by tourists. — Published 2008.0903

    Continue...

    Museums page: [prev] | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | 06 | [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