Adaptive Reuse in 2025: How Architecture Keeps Learning From Its Own Past
Progress usually doesn’t mean erasure. More often, it involves listening and designing with the echo es of what came before.
Progress usually doesn’t mean erasure. More often, it involves listening and designing with the echo es of what came before.
Concrete, steel, wood and glass still anchor contemporary design, now evolving toward lighter, smart er and more sustainable forms.
Like good food, these dining spaces prove that good design is best savored with all the senses.
When buildings talk, architecture becomes the brand itself — no signage required, just form, materia l and space doing the talking.
Sustainability hits close to home when interiors are framed in locally sourced wood.
In place of a finished product, the new campus acts as a living system where architectural flexibili ty gives way to institutional interdisciplinarity.
There's more to these parks than meets the eye, reflecting landscape architects' growing ambitions f or green spaces in urban life.
From memorials to gardens, these spiritual spaces share a common language of atmosphere and attentio n rather than a fixed typology or faith.
From breezeways to skywells, these A+Awards-winning hospitality projects prove that sometimes the mo st important spaces are the ones left unbuilt.