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Fast Company February 2010 Linda Tischler |
How Santiago Calatrava's Buildings Marry Engineering With Biology Santiago Calatrava's buildings marry engineering with biology. And they may just be beautiful enough to make Americans care about infrastructure. |
Popular Mechanics November 3, 2009 Chris Sweeney |
The World's 18 Strangest Bridges: Gallery Unique innovations are found all over the world in local bridge designs. |
AskMen.com William Sutton |
Keep Up In An Architecture Conversation Names and lingo to drop, trends to reference and debates to provoke -- all needed to approach architecture as a confident beginner. |
Salon.com May 1, 2002 Brian Libby |
Cesar Pelli The architect of Manhattan's World Financial Center -- and of the world's tallest towers -- discusses ground zero, the future of skyscrapers and how New York's skyline is handsomer than ever... |
AskMen.com Marc Voyer |
Top 10: Architecture Capitals These top 10 architecture capitals will impress you. |
Wired November 2004 Jessie Scanlon |
Frank Gehry for the Rest of Us Architect Frank Gehry pioneered the use of digital fabrication in the 1990s. SHoP adopts some of Gehry's techniques, but to a different end: lowering costs. The company's process begins with 3-D modeling software and ends with construction workers assembling the laser-cut pieces into a finished structure. |
Job Journal May 13, 2007 |
Career Snapshot: Civil & Structural Engineers California's crumbling infrastructure adds to a growing demand for civil and structural engineers. |
Popular Mechanics September 26, 2007 Alex Hutchinson |
Post-Minneapolis, Engineers Go Gonzo to Bombproof U.S. Bridges Paintball, Nanotechnology and Molecular Band-Aids may sound like a science fair, but these are the gizmos that could prevent terrorists from knocking out your city. |
Popular Mechanics May 2008 Erik Sofge |
Rebuilding America Special Report: How to Fix U.S. Infrastructure American infrastructure is in trouble, from collapsed bridges to leaking dams. Here are some fresh ideas, smart engineering and new technology that can be used to fix it. |
Popular Mechanics June 2007 Jeff Wise |
Re-engineering the Bay Bridge: Built Quake Tough Engineers knew that returning the bridge to its pre-earthquake state wouldn't be enough. They needed to come up with a solution that could withstand some of the worst that California's fault zones are capable of dishing out. |
Job Journal April 15, 2007 |
Career Snapshot: Architect Current demographic trends are increasing the demand for architects. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 Prachi Patel |
Despite Stimulus Money, Most U.S. Bridges Might Stay Dumb Sensors are starting to prove themselves in the biggest, most complex bridges, but the technology isn't ready for the hundreds of thousands of smaller ones |
BusinessWeek April 29, 2010 Michael Arndt |
Hard Times for Star Architects The global real estate implosion killed off scores of their designs, some of which are still hibernating and many of which will never be built |
Searcher October 2005 Mary Colette Wallace |
Do I Need an Architect Or Not?: Some Things You Should Know General information about architects, design processes, and what clients should know. |
Fast Company May 2006 Alec Appelbaum |
Rogers and Heart While most "starchitects" get rich creating eye-popping shapes that could draw crowds anywhere, Lord Richard Rogers enriches neglected urban streets. Now he's training his sights on three dull New York riverfronts. |
Salon.com August 9, 2001 Brian Libby |
Samuel Mockbee Amid architecture's increasing irrelevance, one man decided that poor people can have great houses... |
Wired January 2005 David Goldenberg |
Spanning the Globe Over the next century, engineers hope to connect five continents with bridges (sorry, Australia and Antarctica). Plans are under way to link Alaska and Russia, Spain and Morocco, India and Sri Lanka. |
Metropolis October 2006 Karrie Jacobs |
The Revolution That Never Quite Was The Vermont enclave Prickly Mountain was built as an anti-establishment utopia - and that's what it still is. |