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Welcome

  • This isn't a blog, but a collection of my published articles-- on architecture, urbanism, design, art, technology and travel. I'm a contributing editor at Wired and Metropolis magazines, a consulting editor at Urban Omnibus, and the Cityscapes blogger at WNYC, living in Brooklyn. You can find loose themes along the sides, an archive of articles here and more bio and contact info here.

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    Urbanism

    Metropolis

    • The Big Apple Store
      Local Projects and WXY Architecture give New York tourism a 21st-century interface.
    • Tracking The Future
      Obama's New New Deal, as seen through the lens of a young German photographer.
    • The Long View
      James Corner, the High Line, and the future of landscape architecture.
    • Saint Brad
      In New Orleans with Brad Pitt, architecture's most important patron.
    • Carbon Neutral U
      The greening of the American college campus.
    • Change Is Good
      Bruce Mau is unafraid to tangle with the status quo.
    • Sound Barrier
      A musical art piece approaches the delicate subject of suicide prevention with an affirmation of life.
    • The Peace Maker
      As he works on the landscape at the de Young museum in San Francisco, observers wonder: can Walter Hood bridge the divide between public space and in-your-face architecture?
    • Model World
      Olivo Barbieri’s photographs.
    • The Active Edge
      Designed by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, Brooklyn Bridge Park seems destined to become New York's third great urban landscape.
    • IDEO’s Urban Pre-Planning
      Can its “Smart Space” practice shake up the lumbering world of infrastructure, zoning, and public process?
    • Dreaming in Code
      Jonathan Harris distills the Web’s infinite avalanche of thoughts, facts, and feelings into exquisitely framed portraits of humanity.
    • The Elementalist
      Brad Cloepfil’s emerging body of work may symbolize a shift away from glib shape-making toward a more timeless and lasting architecture.
    • Planning Rwanda
      Thirteen years after the genocide, OZ Architecture and EDAW imagine the physical future of Rwanda.

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