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Museums – platform for discourse

Museums – platform for discourse

As part of the 15th Venetian Architecture Biennale visitors to this city can attend a symposium on the role of museums in 21st century cities on 24 September. ‘Museum of the 21st century 'Content - Form - Impact'’ is the title of the simposium to be held in...

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Winelands Heritage Survey

Winelands Heritage Survey

The Cape Winelands district has a deep and varied cultural heritage. To protect the heritage resources within the Stellenbosch municipal boundary, the Municipality is in the process of compiling a heritage inventory and management plan for the area. Read this document...

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The passing of Fred Stephens

Fred Stephens, a conservationist and past chairman of the Stellenbosch Heritage Foundation, passed away. He arrived in Stellenbosch fresh out of school and spent a long and colourful life in the town. He wrote articles for local and regional newspapers, acted in...

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Night Mayor to keep the peace

Night Mayor to keep the peace

Amsterdam, known as one of the best cities to party, was the first big city to appoint a night mayor. But the parties - and the resulting economic injection it brings - have been a source of headaches for many an official and local. The easiest way to deal with this,...

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A House of many frames

A House of many frames

The Architectural Review’s House of the Year has just been announced. The Cosmic House in Osaka, Japan, is an ‘exceptional example of moving the boundaries in an individual residential project,’ according to the judges. UID Architects is responsible for this series of...

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Stirling shortlist for 2016 announced

Stirling shortlist for 2016 announced

The Stirling Prize shortlist has just been announced, with the new hopefuls and previous winners on the list. Two of the buildings are at Oxford University and a third forms part of the City of Glasgow College. According to Riba’s (Royal Institute of British...

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Serpentine pavilion stuns

Serpentine pavilion stuns

The Danish architect Bjarke Ingels’ design for this year’s Serpentine pavilion is, according to various writers on architecture, the best in this project’s sixteen year history. Ingels, from the firm BIG, designed to curving ‘walls, leaning toward each other and...

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Venice Architecture Biennale is “socially loaded”

Venice Architecture Biennale is “socially loaded”

In a video on the Venice architecture biennale by the magazine Monocle, the exhibition curated by the Pritzker Prize-winner Alejandro Aravena is one of the most socially loaded exhibitions yet. The title of the exhibition is “Reporting from the Front” and investigates...

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Tate Modern’s new Switch House

Tate Modern’s new Switch House

  The Switch House, Herzog & De Meuron’s new ‘wing’ to the Tate Modern in London, recently opened. The firm was responsible 22 years ago for the conversion of the Bankside Power Station into the Tate Modern, a project receiving about 5 million visitors...

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Open Streets on tech and transport

Open Streets on tech and transport

Open Streets Cape Town recently hosted a successful discussion on the influence of technology on transport. At the end of May more than 60 people attended this event. Open Streets aims very specifically to reduce the transport carbon emissions in Cape Town by changing...

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Zaha Hadid died

The Iranian-born British architect Zaha Hadid recently died at the age of 65. She will be remembered for her designs dominated by challenging curves and confrontational lines. The honour shown to her after her death, is well earned. Zaha Hadid, much talked about...

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How Google Is Turning Cities Into R&D Labs

How Google Is Turning Cities Into R&D Labs

Fastcodesign.com: From autonomous vehicles to building codes, Sidewalk Labs is thinking about problems and solutions that could shape cities for centuries - by Diana Budds When Google's city-focused innovation company, Sidewalk Labs, launched in June of 2015, few...

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The Craving for Public Squares

From: The New York Review of Books By: Michael Kimmelman The twenty-first century is the first urban century in human history, the first time more people on the planet live in cities than don’t. Experts project that some 75 percent of the booming global population...

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Living Happily Ever After

From: The New York Review of Books Author: Martin Filler Although the Great Recession was set off when the United States housing bubble burst in 2007, amnesiac Americans are again speculating in domestic real estate. The steep rise in property values during the final...

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South Africa’s future is in the city

South Africa’s future is in the city

The Centre for Development and Enterprise (CDE) launched seven seminal reports on growth in South Africa. Everyone of these reports are significant. We enclose the report on growth in cities. Stellenbosch is technically already a city more than it is a town. It is in any case part part of […]

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How to Make Pittsburgh a Startup Hub

How to Make Pittsburgh a Startup Hub

…So here is my first concrete recommendation for turning Pittsburgh into the next Silicon Valley: do everything you can to encourage this youth-driven food boom. What could the city do? Treat the people starting these little restaurants and cafes as your users, and go ask them what they want. I can guess at least one thing they might want: a fast permit process. San Francisco has left you a huge amount of room to beat them in that department….

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Sit down, do

Sit down, do

Having an open plan office was a new idea in the office of The Barbarian Group, a digital advertising agency in New York. There is only one table for all of the 140 workers. In addition, there is space for about 35 visitors.

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Havana’s heritage threatened by development

Havana’s heritage threatened by development

Neighbourhood renovation often is a loaded term. Gentrification, as it is also called, brings new life and investment to old, dilapidated neighbourhoods. The improvements, on the other hand, push up the property prices and residents who have lived there for many years are often forced out because they cannot afford the new prices.

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Architects from Cape Town and Toronto win in London

Architects from Cape Town and Toronto win in London

An erstwhile South African architect, Brian Vermeulen, is one of the winners of the Building Design for British architecture in 2016. The partnership Cottrell & Vermeulen won the overall gold award and also the award for education architect of the year for a new library and resource centre for Brentwood, an independent school in Essex.

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