Full Width [alt+shift+f] Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from Common Edge

The DNA of Buffalo Has Changed—When Will We Finally Change With It?

Local leaders continue to hold on to outdated assumptions about what the city is and could become.

10 hours ago 2 votes
A Historic Prague Brewery Becomes Part of a New Residential District

Adaptive reuse in the Czech Republic.

yesterday 4 votes
Confronting the Reality of Climate Displacement

Planner Hilary Brown on how underpopulated areas across the U.S. could absorb population resettlements resulting from sea-level rise, flooding, wildfires, and extreme heat.

2 days ago 6 votes
My Crystal Ball: An Architect Holds Humanity’s Future in the Palm of His Hand

Speculative fiction about our next million years of existence.

a week ago 10 votes
How Will the “Big Beautiful Bill” Affect Renewable Energy Efforts?

It’s a mixed bag—with some potential upsides.

a week ago 13 votes

More in architecture

The DNA of Buffalo Has Changed—When Will We Finally Change With It?

Local leaders continue to hold on to outdated assumptions about what the city is and could become.

10 hours ago 2 votes
Modern Craftsmanship Meets Family Living in This Rebuilt California Home

What began as a small repair job turned into a complete architectural reinvention. Designed by boutique Northern California firm Medium Plenty, this three-story family home reflects a deep collaboration between the architects and a creative couple with two young kids. Originally initiated to address structural water damage, the project evolved into a fully custom rebuild with one goal: create a “forever home” that balances soulful materials, family life, and refined design.

3 days ago 6 votes
Reading List 07/12/2025

25 years of earthquakes, Google’s 2013 efforts to build a phone in the US, bear attacks in Japan, coal seam fires, and more.

4 days ago 7 votes
A Look Inside A Home That Feels Like Living in a Forest Sanctuary

Just off the coast of Seattle, a young family found their rhythm on Orcas Island, a lush, bluffside site in Deer Harbor where the forest meets the horizon. With the help of Syndicate Smith, a Washington-based architecture firm known for its sensitive, site-specific work, they built a grounded retreat that’s both elemental and modern. Designed to be built efficiently by the homeowner himself, a general contractor, this house reflects a deep connection to nature, family, and the quiet rituals of island life.

5 days ago 7 votes
Should the Federal Government Sell Land?

An early version of the US Senate budget bill which passed last week included a provision to sell off between 2 and 3 million acres of federal land in western states, ostensibly to be used for homebuilding.

6 days ago 11 votes