In January 2023, RECORD features K-12 schools—from an eccentric building in Madrid to a revamped gym in Bogotá—as well as kitchen and bath projects in California and Connecticut. Editor-in-chief Cathleen McGuigan bids a brief farewell and passes the baton to Josephine Minutillo. In News, Lina Ghotmeh’s 2023 Serpentine Pavilion design is unveiled, Sekou Cooke discusses Hip-Hop Architecture, “Eyes on Iran” takes over a New York state park, and Carol Ross Barney wins AIA Gold. A Sonoma home’s whimsical addition caters to mourning doves; Snøhetta revamps a Manhattan garden; a new Houston Endowment HQ takes inspiration from nature; and a Sydney art museum posits architecture as an experience.
Check back throughout the month for additional content.
In this year’s selection of early childhood through high-school facilities, architects take creative approaches to crafting exemplary buildings as tools for education.
The Spence School’s new outpost for its athletics program provides flexible space for sports, cooking and gardening, community activities, and social events.
In this year’s selection of early childhood through high-school facilities, architects take creative approaches to crafting exemplary buildings as tools for education.
RECORD presents three projects that highlight hospitable environments with access to the outdoors, lots of daylight, and innovative takes on a home's most essential spaces.
The reconstruction of a house destroyed during Northern California's 2017 Nuns Fire yields a gracious space that overlooks acres of Cabernet Sauvignon.
A bi-coastal team designs a renovation and expansion with a sun-filled cooking, dining, and lounging zone that accommodates a couple and their beloved cat.
Los Angeles–based Kevin Daly Architects and its Mexico City–based collaborators, Productora, design a headquarters for Houston Endowment that follows nature’s example.
The architect and curator of Museum of Design Atlanta’s ongoing exhibition "Close to the Edge: The Birth of Hip-Hop Architecture" discusses hip-hop culture as a creative sourcebook for Black designers.
Building industry experts attending the UN climate summit in Egypt see opportunity in addressing global warming even as governments fail to make meaningful commitments.
The first living woman to receive the organization's highest honor as an individual, Ross Barney is known for her public works, including infrastructure and transportation projects.
The Paris-based, Lebanon-born architect—and designer of the forthcoming Serpentine Pavilion ‘À table’—spoke to RECORD about her nature-forward philosophy, the effect of Beirut's 2020 explosion on the city, and tracing history through archeology.
Commissioned by third-generation salmon producer Eide Fjordbruk, the floating pavilion will serve as an exhibition space dedicated to sustainable aquaculture.