Despite remarkable advancements in technology, the construction documents that architects produce for their clients to ...
Parsing distinctions between architecture and “mere” building has been a preoccupation of thinkers and practitioners since ...
Redesign, for decades stigmatized by Modernist purists as an inferior architectural specialty reserved for the artistically timid and creatively challenged, has finally become a legitimate part of ...
The Origins and Evolution of "Urban Design," 1956–2006 quantity ...
At a moment when the word “design” has come to refer to everything and thus nothing, this issue examines the state of architectural practice today.
49: Publics, F/W 2021. Size 224 x 297 mm, (softcover) 160 pages.
These contradictions are what generated this issue of Harvard Design Magazine. “Well, Well, Well” explores some of the tensions and transformations of the landscape of health and illness. As both ...
The arts and humanities contribute to the process of cultural translation by propagating and protecting what I call the “right to narrate”—the authority to tell stories, recount or recast histories, ...
This issue of Harvard Design Magazine and its focus on the putative “core” of landscape architecture raise timely and fundamental questions of disciplinary and professional identity for the field.
At a moment when the word “design” has come to refer to everything and thus nothing, Harvard Design Magazine 52 examines the state of architectural practice today. Once asserted to be the “mother art” ...