Wikipedia:Requested articles/Applied arts and sciences/Architecture
Appearance
Add your request in the most appropriate place below. |
Before adding a request please:
Also, when adding a request, please include as much information as possible (such as webpages, articles, or other reference material) so editors can find and distinguish your request from an already-created article. |
People
[edit]- Phil Ayres Researcher and book author on topic of technology digital design and representation in architecture.
- Iman Ansari - architect, urbanist; founding principal, AN.ONYMOUS; [1]; [2]; [3]; [4]; [5]; [6]; [7]; [8]; [9]; [10]; [11]; [12]
- Elizabeth Brink is a design strategist and Co-CEO of Gensler, the world’s top architecture firm according to rankings published by Architectural Record, Building Design + Construction, and Interior Design. She has served co-CEO with Jordan Goldstein since 2024. Brink is a member of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce Board of Governors and the UCLA Anderson Forecast Board of Advisors. The Los Angeles Business Journal named Brink to its Women of Influence list in 2023 and 2021. She was also a 2020 nominee for the LABJ Women's Leadership Series & Awards. Brink earned her [Bachelor of Arts] from Princeton University and her [Master of Architecture] from UCLA Architecture and Urban Design.
- Bernard Cache ???
- Antonio Contino, co-builder of the Rialto Bridge and architect of the Bridge of Sighs, both historically influential bridges in Venice
- Nathaniel Curtis, Jr. - architect, designer of the Louisiana Superdome; designer of the Rivergate, a teaching hospital at the Free University of Berlin, and many other historic buildings
- Willem Diehl (nl:Willem Diehl), Dutch architect (beginning of the 20th century)
- W. Scott Dunne - Dallas-based architect; designer of 20 or so theaters for the Interstate United chain in the 1920s and 1930s, the Fair Park Band Shell, the Bagdad Supper Club (nightclub), and a number of houses; but apparently he did NOT design the Texas Theatre (Seguin) in Seguin, Texas, despite error by Cinema Treasures; WoodyinNYC (talk) 07:20, 30 November 2013 (UTC)
- Guy Geier - Gerard F.X. "Guy" Geier, II (b. 1954), 2018 President-Elect of American Institute of Architects New York Chapter, Managing Partner of FXFOWLE Architects, and Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. American architect and interior designer, Partner-in-Charge for LEED Platinum SAP SE North America Headquarters and LEED Platinum National Audubon Society Headquarters [[13]]. [[14]][[15]][[16]][[17]][[18]]
- Jordan Goldstein is an architect and Co-CEO of Gensler, the world’s top architecture firm according to rankings published by Architectural Record, Building Design + Construction, and Interior Design. He was named as the incoming Co-CEO in 2023 and has served in partnership with Co-CEO Elizabeth Brink since 2024. Goldstein’s major projects include Marriott International’s global headquarters, Under Armour’s global headquarters, the Motion Picture Association’s headquarters, and the campus of Duke Kunshan University in China. Goldstein was elevated to the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects in 2019 and the International Interior Design Association in 2020. He earned his Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Maryland’s School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation and Master of Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design.
- Prof. Kevin Klinger important researcher in the topic of digital fabrication in architecture and chair of several leading conferences.
- Guo Maolin (Guo is his surname/family name) aka Morin Kaku (Q11643310) - Taiwanese born, Japanese architect and urban planner, introduced skyscrapers in Japan (1920-2012)
- Dan Hogman - architect and artist; known for his high-rise residential and commercial work in San Francisco and China, architectural illustration and sketching; danhogman
.com ; [19]; [20];[21]; - Victor Hornbein - Denver, Colorado, architect; [22]; [23]
- Jill Lever, architectural librarian and curator
- David Martyn (architect) - Through his company Tenfold Engineering, Martyn designs and builds portable buildings that can self-assemble in 10 minutes. [24]; [25]; [26]; [27]; [28]; [29]; [30]; [31]
- Praneet Mathur - [32]
- Jeremy McLeod - Architect, Sustainability Activist [33], Founder & Director of Nightingale Housing [34] & Breathe Architecture [35]
- Anthony Musolino (Italian-American architect known for many projects in Northern Virginia.) [36] [37]
- Heinrich Portscheller - German who immigrated to Mexico in 1866 & worked in South Texas; 2016 book: Master Builder of the Lower Rio Grande: Heinrich Portscheller by W. Eugene George, compiled and edited by Mary Carolyn Hollers George, Texas A&M University Press
- Nili Portugali (Israel) Well-known practicing Architect; senior lecturer; Researcher, published author&film director. Her multidisciplinary work both in practice and theory is closely connected to the holistic-phenomenological school of thought. website
- Bridget Puszka - Architect; known for designing uniquely beautiful homes built using different materials, energy-efficient healthy homes with good indoor air quality; Founder of BP Architects [38]
- Henry R. Shepley - Architect who received the American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal [39], [40]
- Sally Swanson - architect, urban planner; founding principal of Sally Swanson Architects, Inc. an Architectural and ADA Access Compliance firm; designer of the J. O. Ford Elementary School, Richmond, California and many other educational and civic projects [[41]] [[42]] [[43]] [[44]] [[45]] [[46]] [[47]] [[48]]
- W. C. Vahland - local Bendigo architect; founding father of Bendigo; [49]; [50]; [51]
- Timothy Gillespie Vaulkhard (Architect) (Director of Triad Architects Nairobi Kenya. Led the delivery of Kericho Sacred Heart Cathedral. Deceased 14th February 2019) (http://buildesign.co.ke/tim-vaulkhard/ http://triad.co.ke/kericho-catholic-cathedral/ Triad Architects)Domskitect (talk) 18:06, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
- Francis Ventre - Architect credited with creating the term "Dingbat" to describe the frequently criticized soft-story apartment buildings popular in the Sun Belt of the United States. Longtime professor of architecture at Virginia Tech. [52]
Architectural firms and organisations
[edit]- Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) - nonprofit, membership association comprising of 12 charter member universities; founded in 1912 to advance the quality of architectural education[1][2][3][4]
- 5+design - California-based international architecture firm; has designed projects around the world, including The China World Trade Center, the Dubai International Financial Centre and Wuhan, China's first lifestyle center; 5plusdesign
.com ; [53]; [54]; [55]; [56] - Carpenter Sellers Del Gatto Architects (Carpenter Sellers Del Gatto Architects (CSD) is a full service architecture and interior design firm established in Las Vegas, NV in 1986.) (https://www.csdarchitecture.com/, publications: https://www.csdarchitecture.com/publications)* Pace, Architecture, Engineering + Planning - Kuwaiti-based international architecture and engineering firm founded in 1986 by Hamid Abdulsalam Shuaib. Projects include The Avenues (Kuwait) and Central Bank of Kuwait. ([57]) ([www.pace-me.com]) ([58])
- Cranston & Keenan - San Francisco-based firm; built many of the famous Queen Anne houses in the city
- Department of Architecture, Salahaddin University-Erbil (an architecture school in northern Iraq ) (http://eng.su.edu.krd/content.php?topic=153&articleNo=611&lang=en)
- Global Architectural Development (GAD) - architecture firm based in Istanbul, Turkey, and New York City; founded by Gökhan Avcıoğlu in 1985; works include: Changa Restaurant (2000), Exploded House (2003), KUUM Hotel and Residences (2009), Beşiktaş Fish Market (2009), Borusan Music and Art House (2009), One & Ortaköy (2011), Rixos Eskişehir Spa & Thermal Hotel (2013), Serra Gate (2013), and Trump Cadde (2014)
- INTA (urban organization) (International New Town Association) - inta-aivn
.org - KOO (architectural firm) (originally Koo and Associates) - Chicago-based architecture, interior design and planning firm; founded by Jackie Koo in 2005 ([59]) after she spent fifteen years working for large corporate firms; has completed numerous projects throughout the city in markets including hospitality, residential and institutional; the firm's debut project, theWit Hotel, opened in 2009 to much acclaim ([60]), and has become a highly recognizable building in Chicago due the signature zig-zagging chartreuse glass running down its center; in 2012, the firm was chosen as master planner, architect, and designer for the historic restoration of the Purple Hotel site in Lincolnwood, Illinois; though never seen to fruition, the design incorporated adjacent sites to the complex, adding retail and office space and re-focusing the entrance to the hotel complex off a redesigned courtyard; the 200-room hotel included three restaurants, a lounge, spa, and 20,000 square feet of banquet space, bringing the hotel back to its former glory ([61]; [62]); other hotel projects include the renovation of Fairfield Inn & Suites ([63]), the Out Chicago ([64]), and the Autograph Streeterville Hotel ([65]); has completed award winning multi-family residential projects and large-scale institutional renovations
- Norm Architects - Copenhagen based international architecture and design studio founded in 2008 by Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen and Kasper Rønn Von Lotzbeck ([66][67]). The studio works in the fields of industrial and furniture design, residential architecture, commercial interiors, photography and art direction ([68][69]). Norm's projects are influenced by Scandinavian and Japanese minimalism and functionalism ([70]). In the 2016 Danish Design Awards, Norm Architects was awarded as "Designer of the Year" by HMS Crown Princess Mary ([71]) and In september 2013, the Danish restaurant Höst, designed by Norm Architects, won the "World's Best Design Restaurant" in the Bar & Restaurant Design Awards in London ([72]). Norm has released several publications with collaborating studios, among others "The Touch", by Kinfolk and Norm Architects ([73]) and "The Reinvention of Forms" by Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen ([74]). Collaborating furniture and product manufacturers include Ariake ([75]) and Karimoku ([76]) in Japan, Inbani ([77]) in Spain, Fogia ([78]) in Sweden and &Tradition ([79]) and MENU ([80]) in Denmark. The studio's work is often portrayed in the online-based magazines Dezeen and ArchDaily, in which their latest architecture project, the Archipelago House, was nominated in the 2021 Building of the Year Awards. ([81][82] [83][84][85][86][87][88][89][90][91]).
- Pickard Chilton (Pickard Chilton is an architecture firm based in New Haven, CT. It was founded in 1997 by Jon Pickard and William Chilton, who had graduated together from Iowa State University in 1976. Chilton went on to become President of Architecture at Ellerbe Becket, while Pickard worked for César Pelli including as senior associate and design collaborator on the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur. Notable projects include Qualtrics Tower in Seattle, River Point and 300 North LaSalle in Chicago, 609 Main at Texas and BG Group Place in Houston, Northwestern Mutual Tower and Commons in Milwaukee, Eighth Avenue Place in Calgary, Devon Energy Center in Oklahoma City, The Pinnacle at Symphony Place in Nashville, and 1180 Peachtree in Atlanta.) (Sources: ISU Alum Iowa State News Jon Pickard Interview William Chilton Bio)
- Raunak Group - raunakgroup
.com - Raunak Group is a real estate company functioning in the construction market since 1980. The company is known to construct high end residential & commercial buildings of international repute. - Revery Architecture (Originally Bing Thom Architects) - Vancouver based architecture, interiors and planning firm founded in 1982 by Canadian Architect Bing Thom. The firm continues on after Bing Thom's passing under the leadership of Venelin Kokalov and Shinobu Homma. [92][93] Responsible for the design of Surrey City Centre Public Library, Arena Stage as well as the West Kowloon Cultural District's Xiqu Centre in Hong Kong, currently under construction.
- RoTo Architects - Los-Angeles-based international architecture firm founded in 1991 by architect and educator Michael Rotondi. Projects include Madame Tussaud's Hollywood, UCSD La Jolla Playhouse, Texas A&M Prairie View School of Architecture, Carlson-Reges House, Silo House, Warehouse C and their sister company RotoLab. rotoark
.com [94]; [95]; - rzlbd RZLBD IS A BOUTIQUE ARCHITECTURAL PRACTICE BASED IN TORONTO FOUNDED BY ARCHITECT REZA ALIABADI ...; www
.rzlbd ; [96]; [97]; [98]; [99]; [100] (advertisement removed) DGG ( talk ) 16:11, 4 July 2017 (UTC).com - Stevens & Wilkinson (originally Burge & Stevens) - [101]; Atlanta-based architecture, engineering, and interior design firm; founded 1919; designed the first public housing project in the United States, Techwood Homes, and is responsible for bringing modernist architecture to K–12 schools in the Southeast, beginning with the E. Rivers School in 1951 [102]; designed the Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in the 1970s; collaborated with Marcel Breuer for the design of the Atlanta Central Library ([103]) and Robert A. M. Stern for a forthcoming Judicial Center adjacent to the Georgia State Capitol
- Tamayouz Excellence Award (International Architecture Award established in 2012, now one of the most important architectural programmes in the middle east) ([104], [105], [106])
- Tipton Associates, APAC (Tipton Associates, APAC, is the present-day organization of Baton Rouge's oldest architecture firm, founded by Benjamin H. Goodman in 1879. The architecture, interiors, and planning firm has worked at Louisiana State University since the 1950s and today specializes in higher education and student life work.)([107])
Buildings
[edit]- AFRICA
- Cleopatra Hotel – Tunis, Tunisia; venue for December 2012 sale, by Tunisian Finance Ministry, of deposed Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali's possessions; "a sumptuous property in the northern suburb of Tunis" ([108])
- Safaricom Indoor Arena – sports venue in Nairobi, Kenya; venue for speech given by Barack Obama during his July 2015 trip to Kenya; may be branded name for the Kasarani Indoor Arena within the Moi International Sports Centre; [109]; [110]
- ASIA
- Saruhashi - historical bridge in Ōtsuki, Yamanashi, Japan; ja:猿橋
- Shahi Jama Masjid, Sambhal - Babar, The First Mughal Ruler constructed the First Babri Masjid in Sambhal which is to date considered to be a historic monument. (https://sambhal.nic.in/history/ last paragraph)
- Sirkip and Taizang Towers (Stupas) - located east of Turpan in Xinjiang, China [111]
- YES24 Live Hall in Seoul, South Korea. It's apparently one of the country's premier pop music venues, and already has numerous mentions in articles on performing acts, concert tours, albums, etc. (Additionally, mentions of AX-Korea — which also appear in numerous articles — refer to the same venue by its former name.) Official site (in Korean): [112] The introduction page (as translated by Google Translate) actually calls it "Korea's only professional concert venue to worry about.", which I'm guessing is really something more similar to "Korea's only professional concert venue of note."
- EUROPE
- Ireland
- Dromagh Castle – Galway, Ireland, castle ruins in Galway and the oldest castle in Duhallow, O'Keefe Clan Estate [[113]], official registry by NUI Galway[[114]]. The present standing walls of Dromagh Castle which are locally referred to as “The Castle”, were the surrounding walls of the Courtyard. This Courtyard measured forty four yards by thirty six. The walls are about thirty feet high from the base of the surrounding Moat. They are turreted at the east and west sides and at each of the four corners stands a circular tower. The tower at the North-eastern corner was five storey and about seventy feet high. The remaining were three storeyed and about forty feet high. The internal diameter of each tower is fifteen feet three inches. The walls are five feet five inches inches in thickness. The gateways are on the east and west sides and are nine feet high by eighteen feet wide. Each gateway had double gates and was of heavy strongly riveted steel plates. In the centre of the courtyard was the Castle proper. Between the Castle and the surrounding wall was a moat and there was a moat also outside the walls. Both moats could have been about one hundred years old at that time. There was an avenue or roadway leading to the Castle from the south-east that is from the direction of the present Catholic Church and the local tradition has it that fierce fighting took place on this road. However, the Cromwellians drove the O Keeffe men back and charging on horseback through the moat captured the Castle. There is a tradition also that fifteen people were executed after they had surrendered but many escaped through an underground tunnel which had its exit in the farm now owned by William Hartnett. After 1651 the Castle was owned by the Leader Family and was burned by the local Volunteers during the war of Independence 1920-21.
- Listed buildings in the Republic of Ireland in the style of Listed buildings in the United Kingdom and/or any of Listed building#Equivalent status outside the United Kingdom. Sources [115], [116], [117]
- Other
- A Bloc, a shopping centre in Otaniemi, Espoo, Finland (Official site)
- Cathedral of the Dormition of the Mother of God and the Holy Royal Martyrs in Gunnersbury (sometimes described as Chiswick) London; ru:Успенский собор (Лондон, Русская православная церковь заграницей)
- Dairy Farmers Towers, tallest buildings in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia[5][6]
- Downtown One – tallest building in Albania[7]
- Le Corbusier Centre (Chandigarh), also known as the Old Architect Building, now a museum. [118]
- Gaswerk Frankfurt (Oder) - de:Gaswerk Frankfurt (Oder)
- Notre Dame des Champs (Avranches) (fr:Église Notre-Dame-des-Champs d'Avranches) - A major Gothic Revival style church in Avranches, France.
- Párizsi udvar - the 19th-century arcade building in Budapest is mentioned repeatedly in an article which is in DYK and thus may be on the front page in a few days' time. Commons:category:Párizsi udvar. Background: [119], [120] (English) and [121] (French). If you can read Hungarian, there is an extensive Hungarian article, and shorter French and Dutch ones. Notability source in English: [122]. More images with open licenses [123]
- Le Showcase (A French Nightclub that used to be underneath Pont Alexandre III) (https://www.sortiraparis.com/parisian-nights/articles/180268-bridge-the-new-parisian-nightclub-under-the-pont-alexandre-iii-right-bank/lang/en)
- Venco Campus - Sustainable building in the Netherlands; [124]; [125]
- List of shopping malls in Russia (List of shopping malls in Moscow) – according to January 2013 article in The New York Times "Moscow now has 82 malls, including two of the largest in Europe...". Kramer, Andrew E. (1 January 2013). "Malls Blossom in Russia, With a Middle Class". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
- The Atlas Building - London, United Kingdom. 152 meter mixed-purpose residential building on City Road
- Zeeta house putney, London, UK - London, United Kingdom. Constructed in 1936, has interested history of being an office and retail store for a famous Zeeta & Co confectioner company. Basically a lot of info was already compiled by Putney society (https://putneysociety.org.uk/putney_society_files/Buildings-Panel/Zeeta_House_Cinemas_Pubs.pdf)
- Turkey
- Alhambra Han – İstiklal Avenue, Istanbul
- Bursa Boys' High School – founded in 1883; Bursa
- Çorlulu Ali Pasha Complex – built by Çorlulu Ali Pasha; Istanbul
- Esayan Armenian School – Istanbul
- Galata Dervish Lodge – Istanbul
- Kazasker İvaz Efendi Mosque – last work of Mimar Sinan; Istanbul
- Taksim Water Distribution System – Istanbul
- Yenikapı Dervish Lodge – Istanbul
- NORTH AMERICA
- 725 Granville Street – office building above Pacific Centre on Granville Street in Vancouver; [8]; [126]; [127]; [128]; [129]; [130]; [131]
- All Saints Catholic Church, St. Peters, MO. Catholic Church built in 1856 by French / French-Canadian settlers about 32 miles from St. Louis, MO.
- Aspen Hall (Harrodsburg, Kentucky) – historic home in an historic neighborhood in Harrodsburg, Kentucky; now converted to a bed and breakfast inn
- Chapelle des Ursulines, historical chapel in Quebec City [9][10]
- Dollar Savings Bank Building Historic bank and clocktower along the grand concourse in fordham.
- Chicago & North Western Depot in Waukesha, Chicago Milwaukee St. Paul & Pacific Depots in Hartland and Oconomowoc. Railway stations in Waukesha County Wisconsin.
- Clearview Mall [11]
- Fisher Flour Mills / Harbor Island Studios - early 20th-century flour mill on Harbor Island, Seattle recently converted into a film studio. [132] [133] [134], more can easily be found with Google.
- One Yonge Sky Tower - future biggest building in Toronto and Canada being built.
- Parroquia de San Jose Obrero Example of Gothic revival architecture in Mexico located in Arandas, Jalisco [12] [13]
- Cecil Hotel (Calgary, Canada) - A historic hotel in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
- 1355 Market Street, historic San Francisco building that serves as Twitter's headquarters
- Mushroom House, house in Black’s Beach, San Diego, California [14][15]
- St. John's Methodist Church (St. Louis, Missouri), historic church building
- LATIN AMERICA/CARIBBEAN
Codes, regulations, and standards
[edit]- Building Code of Australia
- Building Code of New Zealand
- Facilities Accessibility Design Standards (FADS) - ground-breaking accessibility standards developed by City of London, Ontario; [135]
General concepts and styles
[edit]- Adelspalais - a style and type of building prevalent mainly around the Ringstrasse in Vienna, Austria (17-02-15)
- Amado (Architecture) (ja:雨戸) - a kind of sliding window shutter in Japan.
- Arroyo stone - a common building material in Los Angeles, California; also in other places (24-01-11)
- Ayyubid Architecture (architectural style of the Ayyubid dynasty of Syria and Egypt) (06-05-21)
- balanced argument (info on balanced argument and features) (any)
- Biennale of Landscape Urbanism – Bat Yam (Bat-Yam International Biennale of Landscape Urbanism) - biennale-batyam
.org - Carolina I House - a style of architecture (in South Carolina); [136]
- Chinese Buddhist architecture - Detailing the historical development of architectural styles of Buddhist temples in China as well as common features in their design, similar to the page at Japanese Buddhist architecture
- Coretti - little niches like opera-boxes above the side chapels usually in Jesuit churches
- Digital Tectonics
- French Norman Revival Architecture - an architectural style apparently very similar to Tudor Revival architecture
- Gothic architecture in Antebellum Alabama – gothic architecture in Alabama in 1840s and 1850s; gothic influence on historic churches, commercial buildings, and private residences
- Jungalow Style - A design movement founded by Justina Blakeney that includes decorating with color, pattern and plants. ([[145]] [[146] [147])
- Kanakan - an expert on ancient construction methods in central Asia
- open levee (a.k.a. "Kasumi-tei". ja:霞堤)
- Pure water ridge - zh:清水脊
- rambling home - a house that has lots of extensions added over generations, producing a "rambing" look; see The House of the Seven Gables
- remarkable block structures demonstrating Cantilevered Architecture - [148]
- sala terrena - found in Baroque and rococo palaces, ties the garden to the entrance and main stairway; see fr:Sala terrena, alt. naming is sala terrana or de:GartenSaal
- Semper-Nicolai School - de:Semper-Nicolai-Schule
- Super skinny skyscraper - buildings far exceeding the standard skinny width to height ratio of 1:7. Examples include 432 Park Avenue, 125 Greenwich Street and 111 West 57th Street, see also [149]
- Sydney style - [150]
- Urban signage pt:Sinalização urbana
- Witch's crook - an intentional bend in a home chimney
Architecture of [country]
[edit]- A–F
- Architecture of Austria - at December 2022, redirects to Austria#Architecture
- Architecture of the Bahamas
- Architecture of Bahrain - at December 2022, redirects to Bahraini art#Architecture
- Architecture of Belgium - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Belgium#Architecture
- Architecture of Belize
- Architecture of Benin
- Architecture of Botswana
- Architecture of Brunei
- Architecture of Bulgaria - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Bulgaria
- Architecture of Burkina Faso
- Architecture of Burundi
- Architecture of Cambodia - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Cambodia#Architecture and housing
- Architecture of Cameroon
- Architecture of the Central African Republic
- Architecture of Chad
- Architecture of Comoros
- Architecture of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Architecture of Republic of the Congo
- Architecture of the Cook Islands
- Architecture of Cyprus - at December 2022, redirects to Cyprus#Architecture
- Architecture of Czechoslovakia
- Architecture of Djibouti
- Architecture of East Germany - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of East Germany#Architecture
- Architecture of East Timor
- Architecture of Ecuador - Please create an article on architecture in Ecuador [151] [152] [153] [154] [155] [156] [157] [158]
- Architecture of El Salvador
- Architecture of Eswatini
- Architecture of Equatorial Guinea
- Architecture of Eritrea
- Architecture of the Federated States of Micronesia
- G–N
- Architecture of Gabon
- Architecture of The Gambia
- Baroque architecture in Germany
- Architecture of Ghana
- Architecture of Greece - at December 2022, redirects to Ancient Greek architecture
- Architecture of Grenada
- Architecture of Guatemala
- Architecture of Guinea
- Architecture of Guinea-Bissau
- Architecture of Guyana
- Architecture of Haiti - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Haiti#Architecture
- Architecture of Honduras
- Architecture of Ivory Coast
- Architecture of Jamaica
- Architecture of Kazakhstan - at December 2022, redirects to Architecture of Central Asia
- Architecture of Kenya
- Architecture of Kiribati
- Architecture of Kyrgyzstan
- Architecture of Laos - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Laos#Architecture
- Architecture of Latvia
- Architecture of Lesotho
- Architecture of Liberia
- Architecture of Liechtenstein
- Architecture of Lithuania - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Lithuania#Architecture and housing
- Architecture of Malawi
- Architecture of the Maldives
- Architecture of the Marshall Islands
- Architecture of Mauritania
- Architecture of Mauritius - at December 2022, redirects to Mauritius#Architecture
- Architecture of Moldova - at December 2022, redirects to Moldova#Architecture
- Architecture of Mozambique
- Architecture of Namibia
- Architecture of Nauru
- Architecture of Nicaragua
- Architecture of Niger
- Architecture of Niue
- Architecture of North Korea - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of North Korea#Architecture and city planning
- Architecture of Northern Cyprus
- O–Z
- Architecture of Oman
- Architecture of Palau
- Architecture of Panama
- Architecture of Papua New Guinea
- Architecture of Paraguay
- Baroque architecture in Russia
- Architecture of Rwanda
- Architecture of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
- Architecture of Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Architecture of Saint Lucia
- Architecture of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
- Architecture of San Marino
- Architecture of São Tomé and Príncipe
- Architecture of Senegal
- Architecture of Seychelles
- Architecture of Sierra Leone
- Architecture of the Solomon Islands
- Architecture of Somaliland - at December 2022, redirects to Somali architecture
- Architecture of South Africa - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of South Africa#Architecture
- Architecture of South Sudan
- Architecture of the Soviet Union - at December 2022, redirects to Soviet architecture (a disambiguation page)
- Architecture of Suriname
- Architecture of Syria - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Syria#Architecture
- Architecture of Tajikistan
- Architecture of Tanzania
- Architecture of Togo
- Architecture of Tonga
- Architecture of Turkmenistan
- Architecture of Tuvalu - at December 2022, redirects to Tuvalu#Architecture
- Architecture of Uganda
- Architecture of Uruguay
- Architecture of Vanuatu
- Architecture of the Vatican City
- Architecture of Venezuela - at December 2022, redirects to Culture of Venezuela#Architecture
- Architecture of Western Sahara
- Architecture of Zambia
Other
[edit]- Northaven Trail Bridge -pedestrian bridge in Dallas[17]
UNESCO Prix Versailles - UNESCO award honoring architecture and design, focused on public spaces and infrastructure (airports, hotels, shopping malls, etc. - 2021 winners here
Johtohshiki / shàngliáng (ja:上棟式/zh:上梁) - Japanese style topping out. / Chinese style topping out.
Landscape architecture
[edit]Urban studies and planning
[edit]Organizations
- International Urban Development Association (World Urban Development Association) - inta-aivn
.org - New Cities Foundation - newcitiesfoundation
.org ; an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to making cities across the world more inclusive, dynamic and creative; promotes urban innovations through partnerships between government, business, academia and civil society; hosts a number of events throughout the year, including its annual flagship event, the New Cities Summit, hosted this year from June 17-19 in Dallas, Texas; summit fosters cross-sector collaboration through network building, forums and discussion; summit also features AppMyCity!, a contest for the world's best urban app; foundation co-chairs the Global Cultural Districts Network, a federation of global centers of arts and culture; [159]; [160]; [161] - Sustainable Urban Development Association - suda
.ca
Other
- Better Block - urban-planning movement started in Dallas, Texas; [162]; [163]
- financialization of housing - For example, see Manuel Aalbers
- list of the different zoning districts - a list that includes all of the different zoning districts, (i.e., residential, commercial, etc.)
- overbuilding - too dense/high construction, often without adequate planning and in excess of market demand
- radial plan (sv:Rutnätsplan och radialplan#Radialplan) - a type of city plan used during the Renaissance, the Baroque and the late 19th century where streets radiate from a centre which serves as the focal point (in the following examples mentioned in parenthesis), e.g., Karlsruhe (Karlsruhe Palace), Hamina (town hall), Palmanova (a fountain?) and to a lesser extent cities and towns such as Gothenburg (Odinsplatsen), Motala (Platen's Point in Motala ström), Paris (Place Charles de Gaulle), Rome (Piazza del Popolo), Saint Petersburg (Admiralty Tower), Stockholm (Karlaplan), Versailles (Palace of Versailles) and Washington, D.C. (United States Capitol)
- square mile map (square-mile map) - a map showing the density of buildings in the city in per mile
- urban planning of Aztec Empire
- urban planning of Soviet Union
Urban Planners
- Roberto Bedoya - A thought leader on creative placekeeping vs. placemaking, focused on creating a sense of belonging rather than solely on altering the built environment.([164]; [165]; [166])
References
[edit]- ^ https://www.jstor.org/publisher/acsa
- ^ https://books.google.com/books?id=hMuMEAAAQBAJ&dq=Association+of+Collegiate+Schools+of+Architecture&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=1&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjD8-aO-rmKAxX6LkQIHT7nIt4Q6AF6BAgKEAM
- ^ https://power.buellcenter.columbia.edu/resources/organizations/association-collegiate-schools-architecture
- ^ https://careers.usc.edu/organizations/association-of-collegiate-schools-of-architecture-acs/
- ^ https://www.newmagazine.com.au/dairy-farmers-towers/
- ^ https://thirdigroup.com.au/project/dairy-farmers/
- ^ https://www.dezeen.com/2019/02/15/downtown-one-skyscraper-tirana-albania-tallest-building-mvrdv/
- ^ Duggan, Evan (1 March 2016). "Commercial real estate: Vancouver's Granville Street ripe for a reboot". The Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
- ^ https://www.lonelyplanet.com/canada/quebec-city/old-town-port/attractions/chapelle-des-ursulines/a/poi-sig/1362264/1342646
- ^ https://books.google.com/books?id=RglgAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA132&dq=chapelle+des+ursulines&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjR6oHJxKWAAxX1kWoFHSr5CA8Q6AF6BAgHEAM
- ^ "Clearview Mall".
- ^ https://www.academia.edu/1982574/El_templo_de_San_Jos%C3%A9_en_Arandas_Jalisco._un_ejemplo_del_neog%C3%B3tico_mexicano_inconcluso_y_monumental_1879-2011_
- ^ https://www.alamy.com/the-san-jos-obrero-parish-built-in-the-neogothic-style-in-arandas-jalisco-mexico-image223524909.html
- ^ https://books.google.com/books?id=NXQkDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT137&dq=mushroom+house+san+diego&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwicpvz--p2JAxW5G9AFHTESA54Q6AF6BAgIEAM
- ^ https://www.cbs8.com/article/news/local/story-behind-the-iconic-mushroom-house-on-blacks-beach/509-cd4fded0-cd1f-4d1e-ba99-b521ab298baa
- ^ https://www.periodicocubano.com/la-construccion-del-hotel-de-lopez-callejas-ya-trae-problemas-para-los-transeuntes-de-la-calle-23-en-la-habana/
- ^ https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/northaven-trail-bridge-placed-over-us-75-in-dallas/3334314/?amp=1