Finlayson Street Apartments in Sydney

Finlayson Street Apartments Sydney

Design: Candalepas Associates. The character of Lane Cove may be seen to involve an engagement with the landscape and greening of a suburb, with a subdivision pattern that resulted in individual houses on land blocks of a little less than 1000sqm.

Cave House in Tokyo Property

Cave House in Tokyo

Design: APOLLO Architects & Associates. A house for a single person, in a quiet residential area in Kagurazaka. The exterior walls use dark brown Galvalume steel in a length-wise, lateral direction, in order to blend into the local context.

Strandparken Building B, Swedish Condo

Strandparken Building B

Design: Wingårdh, architects. It started in the 1990s with Arne Olson, a young man with a passion for ecology. The building is nine stories high with a load-bearing frame of solid wood from Martinsson’s, and the outside is entirely clad in cedar shingles. It looks like a wooden house.

Lines of Thought Exhibition in Hamburg

Lines of Thought Exhibition in Hamburg

Architecture Pavilion at the Elbhang between Elbchaussee and Oevelgönne museum port in Hamburg: exhibition looked back over the last 50 years of gmp architecture, five decades of sketches and drawings.

Hectaar Office Building in Belgium

Hectaar Office Building

Architects: CAAN architecten

The mission as proposed by the owner and master builder was to create an office on a small corner site of a former fueling station. The building area is situated on a large traffic crossroad.

Teaching Building for St Clare’s College in Oxford

Teaching Building for St Clare’s College in Oxford

Design: Berman Guedes Stretton, architects

An additional three laboratories, three flexible teaching rooms, two offices, two maintenance workshops and generous circulation spaces that double-up as social learning areas. The project is crowned with a feature staircase.

Heydar Aliyev International Airport, Baku

Heydar Aliyev International Airport

Design: Autoban Studio architects. The terminal building’s contemporary interiors overturn airport conventions of cavernous space and impersonal experience: cocoons exist at the convergence of architecture and art, creating an inviting, intriguing landscape.

Hearst Tower New York City Building

Hearst Tower New York City

Architect: Foster + Partners. CTBUH Awards 2016: 10 Year Award winner. The “first building commissioned post September 11” and one of New York City’s most celebrated buildings, located at 300 West 57th Street, 959 8th Avenue

Swarovski Kristallwelten, Wattens Store

Swarovski Kristallwelten in Wattens

Design: Snøhetta, architects

One of Austria’s most popular attractions with an average of 600 000 visitors annually. Snøhetta contributed with three main elements to the expansion; a playtower and adjacent playground, a shop entrance, and a café / restaurant area.

Postcard House Kimberling, Stone County home

Postcard House Kimberling, Stone County home

Design: Hufft Projects. Taking design inspiration from a vintage Polaroid Camera, the form of the building is intended to frame the scenic setting from every angle – creating ‘postcards’ from within. It is all about the views and the experience

The Belvedere Residence in California

Belvedere Residence

Design: Polsky Perlstein Architects. The clients asked for a custom home that would capture light, views and celebrate their life together. The site has South and West views over the San Francisco Bay toward Sausalito and the Golden Gate Bridge.

Tower Striga 1, Antwerp, Belgium

Tower Striga 1 Antwerp

Design: KCAP Architects&Planners with evr-Architecten

Winning design team for one of three residential towers in the Antwerp Nieuw Zuid project. This new residential area developing along the Schelde is based on a masterplan by Studio Associates Secchi-Viganò.

Shanghai Tower: Skyscraper China

Shanghai Tower skyscraper building

Design: Gensler ; 2DEFINE Architecture. World’s Second Tallest Building: Chief Architect Marshall Strabala updates on construction and design; how tower was built to withstand 114-mph winds and its ‘green’ building design