Archives:
Sirloin

We’re going to try to keep the ‘banter’ in here. Parent to ‘news & events’ and ‘blogs’…
****try to include sub-categories as lower level headers on main page****

Models and Movement

Models and Movement: The Final Touches on Theaters

1/32 scale model

G1 Studio: Take Five

A look into the spring semester studio projects for graduate year 1.
G1 S13

2G Barcelona Casa Studio

“¡Hola!” from Barcelona. The 2G BCN studio just got back from a 9-day architectural grand tour of the Netherlands!

Big Things Happen Here : Dallas

Untitled-1Bags packed and ticket in hand, we headed to Dallas, home of the AT&T Performing Arts Center

Invasion of the Face Eating Boxes!

UG3′s present their massive experiential interior models.

A Little Show and Tell

This time on Manufactured Fields: experiential renders and story time.

Scaling Up


From bigness to thickness, and from no sleep to great models. A post from the undergraduate class of 2014.

Learning from Euclidean Geometry


Paul Andersen of Indie Architecture is leading a group of third year graduate students through a research seminar and studio that investigates “New Swerves on Regular Curves.”

Comically Dead Urbanism


A cemetery proposal for New Orleans, LA with Grant Gibson.

Less PORT More FIELD


Exploring landscape as an artificial and industrially produced assembly system.

Possible Mediums: Rapid Reactions

A three-person perspective on OSU, UIC, UMICH and UK’s conference in Ohio.

A Fresh Meat Field Trip

Fresh Meat Journal
Earlier this month, Fresh Meat embarked on a road trip to Columbus, Ohio to join One: Twelve in a presentation and panel discussion that preluded the opening of the ARCHIZINES traveling exhibition at the Knowlton School of Architecture.

“From Bigness to Thickness”

“From Bigness to Thickness” is intended to engage the challenges preset on the shift of scales between urban and architectural design.

Hey Philip, look at this!

Stewart Hicks’s studio takes on furniture to tackle the issue of character and building type. We are critical of Philip Johnson’s AT&T building in that he didn’t create a new building type.

An Afternoon at the Art Institute Library

Or How I Learned to Get Off of the Internet and Love Books Again