In February, RECORD explores renovation, restoration, and adaptive reuse projects in Antwerp, San Francisco, New York, and Sydney. In Jamaica, Queens a former tuberculosis hospital is reborn as affordable housing; a Canadian hotel gets the royal treatment; and a pair of U.K. artists’ homes are memorialized as museums. Lighting showcases illuminating schemes for a national library in Paris and a Manhattan office. Landscape reveals a reimagined botanic garden in Portland, Oregon, while House of the Month in Vermont echoes historic ski-lodge vernacular. In news: an Anabelle Selldorf Q&A, a Reinier de Graaf book review, and tributes to Cervin Robinson, Arata Isozaki, and Renée Gailhoustet.
Check back throughout the month for additional content.
The T Building, formerly the Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis, was rehabilitated by Dunn Development, SLCE, Old Structures Engineering, and architectural conservator Mary Kay Judy.
In conversation with RECORD, the founder of the New York-based firm known for its work in renovation and expansion to cultural projects, defends designs that have faced recent controversy.
OMA partner and the author of three books over the last six years, Reinier de Graaf writes from within the world of architecture on everything from building codes to architectural awards.
This month's contest features a historic opera house that was reconstructed by a European architect known for the use of stripped-down traditional forms.
The subterranean display within the floor of Sweden's national center for architecture and design presents an "archaeological excavation" of the work of the Stockholm-based studio and 2009 Design Vanguard.
Joining L’Atelier Gaudin Architectes, the firm developed countless solutions for the historic Paris institution that range from the spectacular to the discreet.