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September 2024

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The Architect's Newspaper September 2024

NAAB feuds with AIA, AIAS, ACSA, and NCARB over budgets and governance page 12

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AN treks to Seattle to learn about the mass timber projects of atelierjones page 16

Lydia Kallipoliti’s Histories of Ecological Design: An Unfinished Cyclopedia page 70

TIMBER TERMINAL

ZGF elevates air travel to new heights with a soaring mass timber addition to Portland International Airport. Read on page 56.

$6.95

Read an excerpt of Christopher Brown’s A Natural History of Empty Lots page 74

Comment: Fred Bernstein Open Q&A: Anthony Acciavatti Technology Marketplace

Back to School

Studio Gang renovates a former tobacco warehouse into the new home of the University of Kentucky College of Design. Read on page 32.

EMA PETER PHOTOGR APHY

TOM HARRIS

The Rise of Climate Centers U.S. Porches Take Venice!

Architects are designing a new type of science education facility to study our warming planet. Read on page 30.

RUSSELL COTHREN/COURTESY FAY JONES SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN, UNIVERSIT Y OF ARK ANSAS

MICHAEL MOR AN

8 10 14 20 68

Peter MacKeith, Susan Chin, and Rod Bigelow to lead the U.S. Pavilion in the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale. Read on page 12.

Climatopias

Futuristic imagery often distracts us from deep-seated societal change. In 1516, British author and statesman Sir Thomas More published the book Utopia. The title was a play on the Greek words for the “good place” (eu-topos) and the “no place” (ou-topos). Utopia described an imaginary island where an ideal society developed. In contrast to the British feudal system of More’s time, where the land-owning aristocracy ruled over an impoverished common folk of farmers, craftsmen, and traders, Utopia depicted an egalitarian society where private property did not exist and where resident utopians lived free of violence, sexual discrimination, and religious intolerance. In the several hundred years since, activists, designers, industrialists, and religious leaders have produced hundreds of utopic visions, many imagined but some fully realized. Regardless of the final form, each is a creative vision of what a different social, political, and physical reality might look like. continued on page 72

Sustainability Planet-friendly materials and methods. Read on page 35.

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