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In July, RECORD profiles three projects that point to new paradigms in designing for wellness including a seaside hotel-clinic in Germany, a psychiatric facility for youth in Belgium, and a holistic healthcare hub at a New England university. The issue also showcases a quartet of high-profile U.S. cultural projects—major museum revamps among them—in Buffalo, suburban Philadelphia, Greenwich, Connecticut, and in Brooklyn, where July’s House of the Month is also located. Also this month: dispatches from the Venice Architecture Biennale and the 2023 Serpentine Pavilion, an exploration of how architects design for aging populations, tributes to Claude Stoller and Paolo Portoghesi, and more.
Check back throughout the month for additional content.
Projects from Brooks + Scarpa, Perkins&Will, and Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects show how design can help a rapidly growing segment of the population thrive.
New meets old with this quartet of high-profile U.S. arts center projects—major museum revamps among them—in Buffalo, Brooklyn, suburban Philadelphia, and Greenwich, Connecticut.
Recent visits to some of this year's most significant architecture events resulted in more questions about the profession and its role in society than it did tangible solutions.
For the fourth consecutive year, Gensler, Perkins&Will, and HDR remained fixed at the highest positions on Architectural Record’s annual ranking of the Top 300 American architecture firms by revenue.
Arguing that current perspectives fail to adequately engage people with disabilities in shaping the public realm, Gissen challenges disciplinary paradigms.
A native New Yorker, architect Claude Stoller witnessed Modernism’s ascent in North America firsthand, interacting with the movement’s leading players and later designing works that exemplified its principles.