where you will find an internet pocketful of spaces, places, ideas + art.

Posts Tagged: architecture

Love SpacingToronto’s Before/After photo series. (I had a similar idea involving vintage postcards of various cities…but when you snooze, you lose.)
Reminds me of other delightful old/new transitioning-spaces projects, like the charming Dear Photograph website, or Stewart Brand’s still-relevant book (and subsequent 6-part BBC television series!! Who knew?), How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They’re Built.

(dear photograph)

(infographic inspired by How Buildings Learn)
Less urban-y, but also cool:
Irina Werning’s Back to the Future Project (but I’ve already told you about this one)
Young me/Now me

Love SpacingToronto’s Before/After photo series. (I had a similar idea involving vintage postcards of various cities…but when you snooze, you lose.)

Reminds me of other delightful old/new transitioning-spaces projects, like the charming Dear Photograph website, or Stewart Brand’s still-relevant book (and subsequent 6-part BBC television series!! Who knew?), How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They’re Built.

Dear Photograph

(dear photograph)

How Buildings Learn

(infographic inspired by How Buildings Learn)

Less urban-y, but also cool:

nevver:

Home Alone

nevver:

Home Alone

Source: nevver

"In the centre of Copenhagen, on the sixth floor of the Royal Hotel, a single room preserves a microcosm of the definitive masterwork of Danish architect and furniture designer Arne Jacobsen (1902-71). Room 606 is the last surviving interior of the SAS House: an unparalleled example of modern architecture and design, completed in 1960."

-

Oh, Copenhagen (part 1).

An article in Hong Kong magazine outlining three concepts for a new public space by the waterfront in Kowloon.  

An article in Hong Kong magazine outlining three concepts for a new public space by the waterfront in Kowloon.  

Lovely new design for the Oakland Museum of California, by Mark Cavegnero Architects. 

Though I actually really like the 1960s original as well (second photo, above), it seems like the interior spaces would be a sight more depressing.

(via Metropolis Mag, the September issue)