More from Construction Physics
The recent Los Angeles fires have highlighted the rising costs of homeowners insurance in the US.
Everything put into the building that is unnecessary, every cubic foot that is used for purely ornamental purposes beyond that needed to express its use and to make it harmonize with others of its class, is a waste — is, to put it in plain English, perverting someone’s money — George Hill, commercial real estate expert, 1904
Book review of the autobiography of Morris Chang.
The evolution of polycrystalline diamond drill bits
More in architecture
A new book on the Dutch monk-architect tries to explain it all.
This year, AI will assert itself on both the designer and the client sides of the construction industry.
In 2008, a billion gallons of toxic sludge spewed across 300 acres of Tennessee in the middle of the night. It was just before Christmas. At the time, Jared Sullivan was in high school and remembers the disaster. For over fifty years a power company called the Tennessee Valley Authority – or the TVA –
In the closing chapter of Archinect In-Depth: Visualization, we return to one Renaissance painting referenced in an earlier article from the series. What does this painting, and our wider series, teach us about the relationship between technology and visualization? What do they tell us about the potential for visualization to open new worlds not beholden to the natural laws of space and time?