Ytali: Architectural guide Venice

Ytali: Architectural guide Venice

The italian on-line magazine ytali published an article about “architectural guide venice”. the article is written by cristina valentini who interviewed the authors....
Collector’s Edition – Architectural Guide

Collector’s Edition – Architectural Guide

This Collector’s Edition of the award-winning Architectural Guide series by DOM publishers presents 200 buildings from twenty-one different cities which have produced outstanding architecture in recent years. The authors are members of the global network Guiding Architects which is dedicated to the promotion of architecture, open spaces and urban development. Each of these critics based in Europe, the Middle East or the USA presents five Highlights and five Hidden Gems comprising both modern buildings and landscape architecture. All authors are trained professionals with degrees in the field of architecture and most of them run independent architectural practices in their respective cities. They conduct guided tours for experts and non-experts, hold lectures, publish specialised texts, organise workshops and symposia, or work in teaching and research. 20 booklets in a slipcase: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Bilbao, Budapest, Doha, Dubai ∕ Abu Dhabi, Frankfurt ∕ Main, Hamburg, Istanbul, Milan, Moscow, Munich, New York, Oslo, Rome, Rotterdam, Turin, Venice,...
Biennale Architettura

Biennale Architettura

‘Intelligence. Natural, artificial. Collectives.’ is the title of the 19th Architecture Biennale taking place in 2025. After the exclusive vernissage hustle and bustle, it will open its doors to the general public from 10 May to 23 November. The curator is the Italian architect, urban planner and architectural theorist Carlo Ratti, who has become known for his urban visions of the future characterised by digitalisation. The focus will be on architecture and urban spaces that are able to respond dynamically to the needs of people and the environment. He himself coined the term ‘senseable city’. The Biennale of recent years have shown that an exhibition of this kind is no longer about representing the latest national achievements, but is rather understood as an experimental space. We can assume that the curator follows this attitude, as Ratti says in his appeal: ‘To confront a burning world, architecture must utilise all the intelligence that surrounds...