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February 2012
Features
Coming Home

Drawing on his experience in a wheelchair, Michael Graves designs the Army’s first fully accessible house for wounded vets and their families.
Features
Deluxe Paint Job

Armed with a Newtonian color wheel, the architects at Stamberg Aferiat infuse a midcentury hotel with a burst of visual energy.
Features: An Appreciation
Features: Dialogue
Features: Views of the Water
Features: Prescription for Vitality
Features: Like Father, Like Daughter
Features: A Tree of Triangles
Features: The Almighty Grid
Features: All Work and a Little Play
Features: Oversize Tangle
Features: Goodbye, Monotony!
Features: X Marks the Spots
Features: Coming Home
Features: Deluxe Paint Job
Features: Living on the Edge
Notes from Metropolis
An Appreciation

The long and prolific life of Eva Zeisel

Dîa-logue(s)
Dialogue


Observed
Views of the Water
Prescription for Vitality
Like Father, Like Daughter
A Tree of Triangles

America
The Almighty Grid

Although today it seems as natural as air, Manhattan’s system of numbered streets is actually a visionary piece of urban planning.

In Production
All Work and a Little Play

Small touches of whimsy enliven Nika Zupanc’s austere home-office furniture.

Materials
Oversize Tangle

Dana Barnes makes giant sculptural textiles using an improvised felting technique.

Productsphere
Goodbye, Monotony!

There are some bold product choices available for people who want to express themselves.

Reference Page
Reference


X Marks the Spots

Columbia’s Studio-X, a think tank with labs all over the world, may be a new model for design education.

Living on the Edge

Peter Bohlin has crafted a landscape-hugging house on the border of a picture-perfect nature preserve in Connecticut.

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