News!
The Competition is out now!
Become a Pen Pal!
!
Dark mode
Off
Contact us
Archive
Search
B
About
Contact
Archive
Search
About
Contact
Results
A Dream About Action, by Emilie Stecher.
But sadly,
there
are still a lot of people who won’t believe or keep themselves oblivious about
their
impact on the Earth.
…
View →
Language and Design Cognition: Toward a theory of Language Based Design, by Christopher Clarkson.
Language and Design Cognition: Toward a
theory
of Language Based Design. Christopher Clarkson. I want you to imagine this red bicycle I’ve been thinking about designing for a while.
…
View →
What's Your Problem?, by Sam Eadington.
Of all the philosophies architects try to apply to
their
architecture, Popper’s logic of falsification is perhaps the most wasteful one
they
could choose.
…
View →
The Archetypal Bias of Scale Figures Catalogs, by Romain Touron.
The permanent dialogue between the physical and projected realms
complexify
and obscure identities, since individuals are presented with a way to define themselves.
…
View →
Dreamed cities as neurodivergent cities, by Oliwia Jackowska.
What do
they
mean? Why should we watch them a bit closer? Impression of a dream. At some point in life, I am sure, most people try to seek the meaning of
their
dreams.
…
View →
Podcast, Archi-Podcast, by Jan Pruszynski.
The most important quality of podcasts for me personally is how
they
let me optimise my time.
…
View →
What if Vitruvius played Minecraft? First notes on gaming architecture as experimental design, by Bruno de Andrade.
In such game, the
complexity
of architecture and the built environment is reduced to a 1m³ block logic. Remember when all of your problems seemed easy to solve with Lego bricks? Think about a digital Lego.
…
View →
Blog: Mar 01, 2021
LANGUAGE AND DESIGN COGNITION: TOWARD A
THEORY
OF LANGUAGE BASED DESIGN. - The editorial team. ← Back to the blog overview. Links. Interested in becoming a. Pen Pal? Bnieuws. Instagram →. Facebook →. Issuu →. Julianalaan 134. 2628 BL Delft.
…
View →
The Flawed Notion of a Separate Here and There, by Matt Roberts.
Now, to be clear, I am not about to argue
there
is no such thing as here or
there
- that would be ridiculous -
they
do exist.
…
View →
Unsophisticated Sophistication, by Jonas Althuis.
You had a handful of websites that you knew, perhaps
they
were in your bookmarks, or you knew
their
URLs by heart. Sometimes a friend would stumble upon a cool new website and share it with everybody. A new discovery.
…
View →
Living in safe mode: In conversation with Theo Deutinger, by Marco Fusco and Matthew Cook.
Living in safe mode: In conversation with
Theo
Deutinger. Marco Fusco and Matthew Cook. In early November,
Theo
Deutinger led The Berlage Design Master Class, entitled "Living in Safe Mode: A Quest for the Essential."
…
View →
Cover - Why Yellow?, by Jack Oliver Petch.
Maybe you haven’t realised yet, but everywhere you look, this colour is
there
. Captions working from top left to bottom right.
…
View →
P-618, by Lucie Castillo-Ros.
Upon reading this
theory
, Schauss starts to wonder: if our emotions can be visually and universally represented by colours, could colours retrospectively influence our emotions?
…
View →
Smooth City, by René Boer.
RB: I think many of the historical examples were often singular projects, like Haussmann’s plan for Paris, which obviously had many consequences for other cities:
they
were copied;
they
were tested in the French colonies.
…
View →
Book Review: Being Ecological, by Amy Young.
It highlights the, ‘Architect is God,’ phenomena, in which architects try to solve complex social, political and health issues, that are far beyond
their
skillsets and the reaches of
their
profession.
…
View →
Indesem 23: Embracing Boundaries, by Joost Hoepman.
But here's the thing: while these external factors hold significance,
they
should not define the essence of architecture. Instead, we should dare to transcend the physical and social boundaries of our field.
…
View →
Explore Lab Fictions, by Camille Billottet, Anne de Zeeuw & Aimee Baars.
They
affect our mood, perception, localisation,
they
are part of our everyday life, of sex, food, nature, industry, of others and ourselves, of birth and death.
…
View →
What Are You Watching Right Now? Oppenheimer, by Tuyen Le, Nathan Döding, Maja Liro.
This is the first of our new Film Reviews section, in which members of the team discuss
their
praise and disgust for new films. Oppenheimer promotional poster 2023. Tuyen.
…
View →
People are in fields, by Nicole van Roij.
Apart from some mysterious individuals situated as far away from eachother as
they
possibly could be, the place is desolate.
…
View →
The Hot and Cold of Disseminating, by Tuyen Le.
The users are constantly evolving, how can the publishing houses disseminate
their
gathered knowledge and content?
…
View →
The Game, by Ricardo Avella.
Following his reasoning, a superficial. message is one that has been stripped to its essence in such a way that it remains nimble and able to stay above the surface, while
complexity
sinks below.
…
View →
Bnieuws edition 55/03. Published February 2022.
The Flawed Notion of a Separate Here and
There
. , which makes a case for the
complexity
of the world through interdependencies. The most distant events, in both space and time, prompt effects that could not have been accounted for.
…
View →
What Do You Care About?, by Zuza Sliwinska & Job Schroën.
They
focus specifically on fighting poverty and inequalities that put women and girls in a vulnerable position when faced with an emergency. It’s cool to study architecture from different places.
…
View →
The Metaverse: Our New Playground?, by Saartje Nibbering, Bryan Ye.
Small metaverses such as Fortnite, Roblox, Minecraft, The Sandbox, and Horizon Workrooms exist, but
they
are not yet linked into a larger virtual environment.
…
View →
Promoting a positive Relation-to-Self through Recognition in Architectural Design, by Jeremy Hill.
quality of life, but also expressed that
their
need for recreational greenery was not valued (and possibly actively disvalued).
…
View →