Historic preservation may be the key to Cuban-American relations.
Inclusiveness is something we do for ourselves.
Houston, Des Moines, Dayton, Washington, D.C., and Richmond
Differentiation and diversification are part of the architect's DNA.
New Web-based and cloud-based tools strip away some of the obstacles to running an efficient office.
The last time we were whipsawed by the economy, we lost a generation.
Las Vegas, Biskra, Algeria, St. Louis, Portsmouth, N.H. and Philadelphia.
Campus growth has consequences for the wider community. The trick is making sure they're the good kind.
Robert Reed, Assoc. AIA, found a second act pushing for environmental solutions.
Barcelona, New York, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C.
Architects are offering supplemental services as a way of staying afloat in a tough economy.
How do we decide what's right?
Not your typical firm, but its principals are pursuing an elemental practice.
Can urban, multifamily rentals drive the economy forward?
Architects are assuming a variety of roles in plans to remove obsolete infrastructure.
Green architecture is just as important on the other side of the table.
Design can help us make the most of our natural resources.
Kansas City; Birmingham; Daegu, Korea; and Orlando
Partnering with the Clinton Global Initative, the AIA pledges to create a stalled projects database.
As the lines between local and gloabl practices blur, one architect reports on India's viability in the 21st century.
The difference between small and big in the federal market has very large consequences.
Ten years after 9/11, how can design improve security?
Helinski, Los Angeles, Dayton, Boston, and Tokyo
Ownership and equity are about more than square footage in today's home. They're about design's value and process, too.
Los Angeles; Dunmore, Pa.; Blacksburg, Va.; and New Orleans.
Architects can make the difference between a resilient community and one whose hidden fissures become chasms.
Building a residential practice is about working at the center of the design process.
Design can help mitigate disaster.
Design between architecture's practice and academy for areas in need.
The definition of "humanitarian design" is still in flux, even if its practice proliferates.
Promoting public interest architecture with a "triple bottom line."
For the first time in history more than half the world's people live in cities. Now what?
London, Ottawa, Chicago, and Washington
Detroit AIA's Urban Priorities Committee hopes to revitalize its city despite Motown's terminal prognosis.
Ecology matters.
Grounding architecture within a larger building ecology.
Richard Tyler lost everything in Katrina, but rebuilt his life with the help of a "Porchdog."
Across the Institute
Universal design is architecture's next great frontier.
Tammy Eagle Bull, AIA, draws together community and tradition to define an architectural practice
Recognizing the intersection of "design" and "health" is vital for a fitter nation.
What's happening at AIA chapters across the country.
Local needs bolster a national trend to redefine healthcare’s physical footprint.
Reevaluating Qualifications-Based Selection systems in an age of cost cutting
Wyck Knox, AIA, of VMDO Architects on greening schools and curricula.
It's time for architecture to get out of the studio and into the larger world we should serve.
What's happening at AIA chapters across the country.
The AIA 2011 Convention will use New Orleans to explore regional design.
Philadelphia's Charter High School for Architecture and Design forged a new kind of design-based curriculum in public schools. Is the experiment working?
Director of programs for the World Affairs Council of Oregon talks about the value of architecture centers.
What's happening at AIA chapters across the country.
This country is rebuilding itself, and it needs architects.
When a tornado devastated the seamier side of Nashville, AIA helped the town redefine its future.
Our first and highest priority has to be getting architects back to work.
The dean of the University of Washington's College of Built Environments and ACSA president talks about the future of the profession.
The design director in Gensler's Shanghai office talks about the future of the profession.
The president of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson & Abbott talks about the future of the profession.
The issues of the 21st century are at their core design matters that require the core competency of architects.
Architecture is more than just the design of buildings. Meet four professionals bringing design thinking to the masses.
This May, the nation's architects convene in New Orleans to advance the future of vibrant, place-based design.
Communities across the country are contending with devalued real estate, and architects need to step up and help rethink these cities.
What's happening at AIA chapters across the country.
The director of the real estate development program at Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation talks about the future of the profession.