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
I read it on the internet..., by Jonas Althuis.
A website allows for new types of content that haven’t been possible in the
past
; gifs, videos, interactive experiences, something we’re already spending a lot of time thinking about.
…
View →
Blog: Oct 01, 2021
Past
, Pandemic,
Future
. Over the summer, the Bnieuws team worked hard on our contribution to the "What have we learned?" exhibition that took place in the orange hall of the faculty in September.
…
View →
Reflecting on the Past: Goodbye, by Ada Jaśkowiec and Lydia Giokari.
Reflecting on the
Past
: Goodbye. Ada Jaśkowiec and Lydia Giokari.
…
View →
The Future of Home, by Oliwia Jackowska.
The
Future
of Home. Words and Images. Oliwia Jackowska.
…
View →
A Decade of Bnieuws, by Aimee Baars.
There is a sense of completeness in the information we get when reading a print media, as compared to the digital platform: merely taking a couple of minutes of your day to step away from the ever-
present
technology radius, concentrating on holding the
…
View →
Tracing Archaeology, by Nicole van Roij.
The most obvious distinction between archaeology and architecture is arguably that archaeologists focus on the
past
, while architecture has a tendency to focus on the
present
and
future
.
…
View →
Anatomy of the Dream, by Jonathan Kaye.
We
pass
through this state when we dream, navigating the liminal space between reality and fantasy. How can we recognise this boundary and leverage it for our own growth? Twelve Hours of Waking Dreams. (by Jonathan Kaye, marker and paper, 2022).
…
View →
A Crisis of Imagination, by Joost Hoepman.
Have we lost our ability to explore the
future
with curiosity and imagination?
…
View →
Rau muống, nostalgia, and war, by Tuyen Le, Mary Le.
They planted the seeds they have smuggled with them inside their limited luggage, and through these offerings, nostalgia reliably offers one thing, ESCAPE, away from the uncertainty of the
future
, and towards the permanence of the
past
.
…
View →
By Product, Reversibility, Tangible and Intangible Longevity , by Anouk Fontaine.
Or should it be inherently more polyvalent and can then adapt to many other programmatic
futures
? But what determines the so-called polyvalence?
…
View →
Bkino X Community Office Presents: Film Festival Good, Bad, And In-Between, by Cecile Calis.
Bkino X Community Office
Presents
: Film Festival Good, Bad, And In-Between. Words and Images. Cecile Calis. Have you ever been to a film festival? Some festivals have a wide range of movies from all over the world.
…
View →
Changing the Narrative, by Elena Rossoni.
The high prominence of the site’s location is undoubtable, and its
future
transformation is thought by many to be an incredible opportunity, in terms of reconciliation but also re-use.
…
View →
Our archive of past editions.
News! The Competition is out now! Become a Pen Pal! ! Archive. Links. Interested in becoming a. Pen Pal? Bnieuws. Instagram →. Facebook →. Issuu →. Julianalaan 134. 2628 BL Delft. Navigation. About Bnieuws →. Contact us →. Visit our Archive →. Pen Pa
…
View →
Modernism's Secret in the East, by Badar Haq.
The former Mughal Empire seemed to be disillusioned from the
past
and untouchable followed by a colonial era, implementing standards that blurred the purpose of their own existence.
…
View →
A Recap of INDESEM.21, by Hidde Dijkstra.
And participating in the workshops of Rhino (hosted by it's developer McNeel) and MVRDV NEXT showed us the possibilities that are now
present
. But we want to tell you something that we as the INDESEM team learned in the
past
year.
…
View →
A Dream About Action, by Emilie Stecher.
“protect the eternal
present
”. But just because the impacts are not visible right here doesn’t mean they are not happening.
…
View →
The Flawed Notion of a Separate Here and There, by Matt Roberts.
of this article, I will attempt to spin a particular narrative that - perhaps - illustrates how sometimes a distinction between. here. and. there. , and now and then, is not quite as simple as it seems and that thinking in this dichotomous way could
prevent
…
View →
Reflecting, by Editorial team.
With the academic year coming to an end, the editorial team is inviting you to reflect on these
past
months to recognise and appreciate things that we might overlook on a day-to-day basis, as we are all waiting impatiently for the summer break!
…
View →
Traces of War, by Jan Pruszyński.
However, for the inhabitants of Sarajevo, the small red-raisin-filled craters from mortar damage are a daily reminder of their tragic
past
and what became the longest siege of a city in the history of modern warfare. Sarajevo Roses / Author unknown.
…
View →
Podcast, Archi-Podcast, by Jan Pruszynski.
This one covers a lot of different topics, however overall it’s about architecture, buildings and cities, from the distant
past
to the
present
day.
…
View →
The Hot and Cold of Disseminating, by Tuyen Le.
It is a question the Bnieuws team is involved in to reflect, along with the panellists of professionals form the publishing world during the BK Talk - Disseminate: The
Present
and
future
of editorial practice. Click to enlarge!
…
View →
The Bnieuws website is launching soon!
Be sure to subscribe below so that you can stay notified about the website’s launch, as well as the publication of
future
editions.
…
View →
Nah That Won't Happen Here Again, by Nathan Döding.
The Pax Romana is a perfect example of political stability in
past
times that seemed endless at the time, but proved unsuccessful in the end.
…
View →
Writing on the Wall, by Federico Ruiz.
“People
pass
by every half an hour and ask why I’m doing this, or if the names will come back. I tell them that I don’t know, [that] they just told me to paint it white.
…
View →
Dear TU Delft, by Christopher Clarkson.
As an associate professor of Urbanism, Roberto Rocco, explains, “If you don’t understand what this colonial
past
was, it’s difficult to understand what’s happening in the Netherlands now.”.
…
View →