Magazine

Architecture Research Office | 04.05.2026

Building of the Week

Decades before the creation of Central Park, New Yorkers seeking nature ventured to Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. Founded in 1838, the cemetery's now 478 acres still a half million visitors every year paying homage to some of the famous permanent residents or just taking in the site's...


John Hill | 01.05.2026

Film

Visitors to Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms State Park on New York's Roosevelt Island may notice something different this spring: a sound installation by artist Hans Rosenström finds the memorial's trees “speaking” and “singing.”


John Hill | 22.04.2026

Film

A new 22-minute film from The Frick Collection delves into the institution's renovation and enhancement that opened to the public a year ago. Featuring insights from architect Annabelle...


John Hill | 14.04.2026

Found

Last week saw the unveiling of the City Hall Park Deliverista Hub, billed as the first worker-designed rest and e-bike charging hub for delivery workers in the United States. The structure was designed by FANTÁSTICA, the street furniture brand founded by urban designer J. Manuel Mansylla, aka...


John Hill | 21.03.2026

Found

Ahead of its opening on March 21, World-Architects got a sneak peek of the newly expanded New Museum, which has added an OMA-designed structure next to its 2007 building designed by SANAA. Here we present a photographic tour through the 60,000-square-foot building, from top to bottom.


John Hill | 03.03.2026

Found

Here we highlight four exhibitions in Manhattan and Brooklyn that opened recently or will open soon, ranging from a historical look at a swath of Midtown and alternative proposals for houses to monographic exhibitions on a late visionary architect and critic, and an architect from Austria.


John Hill | 11.02.2026

Film

A new eleven-minute film from Foster + Partners explains the design, engineering, and functioning of 270 Park Avenue, the firm's new supertall skyscraper in Midtown Manhattan, and takes viewers inside some of the spaces that serve as the headquarters of JPMorgan Chase.


WXY architecture + urban design | 02.02.2026

Building of the Week

The Packer Collegiate Institute is a private school in Brooklyn Heights that has occupied a Gothic-style building since the mid-1800s, though it has seen expansions and modernizations over the years. The latest expansion is the Garden House, designed by WXY architecture + urban as a four-story...


John Hill | 20.01.2026

Found

On a chilly January afternoon, World-Architects stopped by Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park in Battery Park City to look at the recently completed pavilion designed by Thomas Phifer and Partners. As the sun set, we took some photographs.


John Hill | 18.01.2026

Headlines

The OMA-designed expansion of the New Museum, which opened on New York's Bowery in a building designed by SANAA in 2007, will finally open to the public on March 21—ten years after the project was announced.


John Hill | 19.11.2025

Headlines

News has broke that Sperone Westwater, the 50-year-old art gallery based in New York City, is closing at the end of the year. This raises the question: What will become of the gallery's bespoke eight-story building on the Bowery designed by Norman Foster?


Sheppard & Rout Architects | 17.11.2025

Building of the Week

Set against the wild limestone cliffs and dense coastal forest of Punakaiki, Punangairi redefines what a visitor center can be. Designed by Sheppard & Rout Architects, in collaboration with Ngāti Waewae, the project moves beyond tourism infrastructure to become an act of cultural and...


John Hill | 13.11.2025

Headlines

On November 8, Sotheby's New York opened its new home in the Breuer Building, the 1966 brutalist masterpiece designed by Marcel Breuer for the Whitney Museum of American Art. The renovation of the modern landmark was carried out by Switzerland's Herzog & de Meuron with New York's PBDW...


John Hill | 24.10.2025

Headlines

Six years after it opened to a mix of fanfare and controversy, the Hunters Point branch of the Queens Public Library in New York City has reached a settlement in a class action lawsuit brought over the inaccessibility of portions of building for people with disabilities, after modifications to...


John Hill | 22.10.2025

Headlines

Although it won't be 100% complete and fully occupied for some months, JPMorganChase opened its new 60-story global headquarters at 270 Park Avenue in Midtown Manhattan on Tuesday, October 21, six years after the demolition of its predecessor, the 52-story Union Carbide Building, began. 


John Hill | 23.09.2025

Headlines

Of the ten proposals hoping to secure three coveted casino licenses for downstate New York, five of the teams have withdrawn their bids or had them voted down by so-called Community Advisory Committees. Of the five remaining bids, none are in Manhattan.


John Hill | 16.09.2025

Insight

Three high-profile museum projects nearing completion in New York and New Jersey—New Museum, Princeton University Art Museum, and Studio Museum in Harlem—have one architecture firm in common: Cooper Robertson. World-Architects recently stopped by Cooper Robertson’s Lower Manhattan office to...


John Hill | 09.09.2025

Headlines

Innovation QNS, the proposed five-block mixed-use development with apartments, office space, retail, open space, and an arts and culture hub next to the historic Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens, has been scrapped in favor of smaller developments.


Susan T Rodriguez | Architecture • Design with Mitchell Giurgola Architects | 25.08.2025

Building of the Week

Located in the northeast corner of Central Park, just steps from New York City's Harlem neighborhood, the Davis Center at the Harlem Meer opened to the public in April. Replacing the former Lasker Rink and Pool that was built in the 1960s, the new Davis Center provides year-round recreation in...


KHOA VU | 07.07.2025

Building of the Week

The aptly named Ts VEIL is a social dining space in Ho Chi Minh City spread across three floors behind a draped metal mesh facade. Sitting on a corner parcel in a dense neighborhood, the facade veils a structure that is an assemblage of new and old. Architect Khoa Vu answered a few questions...


John Hill | 26.06.2025

Headlines

A number of parks and other public spaces in New York City have made headlines in recent weeks. Here we highlight four of them: a beloved community green space, a waterfront park, an informal skate park, and a piece of pedestrian infrastructure.


John Hill | 29.05.2025

Headlines

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City is reopening its Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, with galleries dedicated to the arts of Africa, the Ancient Americas, and Oceania, following a nearly decade-long transformation by Kulapat Yantrasast of WHY Architecture.


John Hill | 20.05.2025

Headlines

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts has revealed the preliminary design for the Amsterdam Avenue side of its famed campus on New York's Upper West Side. The plaza and streetscape improvements are designed by Hood Design Studio, WEISS/MANFREDI, and Moody Nolan.


Brent Buck Architects | 28.04.2025

Building of the Week

Three years ago, the New York City Building Code was updated to allow the use of cross-laminated timber as a low-carbon alternative to other construction materials. The first mass timber project approved and built under the code revision was just completed: Frame 122, a five-story apartment...


John Hill | 25.04.2025

Found

The textured masonry facades of Josep Lluís Sert’s nearly 50-year-old Eastwood apartment buildings—now The Landings—on Roosevelt Island are being covered with insulation to meet New York City’s recently implemented energy-efficiency requirements. World-Architects visited to see portions of the...


John Hill | 24.04.2025

Headlines

Following a two-stage competition, Kansas City, Missouri's Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art has selected WEISS/MANFREDI Architecture/Landscape/Urbanism as the lead architect for the museum’s upcoming expansion and transformation project.


John Hill | 21.04.2025

Headlines

The US Department of Transportation (DOT) has announced that the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) will be leading the renovation of Penn Station, removing New York State's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) from the project.


Michan Architecture | 14.04.2025

Building of the Week

With its sculpted balconies in concrete, people walking by the apartment building at the southeast corner of Campeche and Culiacan in Mexico City's Condesa neighborhood would be forgiven for assuming it is new construction. In fact, it is an adaptive reuse of a run-down building from 1953,...


John Hill | 03.04.2025

Film

Architectural Digest visits Casa Orgánica, the home of artist and architect Javier Senosiain that he built into the earth overlooking Mexico City. The 12-minute film with commentary from Senosiain beautifully captures the colorful, cave-like spaces of a one-of-a-kind creation.


John Hill | 02.04.2025

Headlines

On March 26, the New York City Council passed a vote reforming the rules governing scaffolding and sidewalk sheds, the latter of which have become ubiquitous across Manhattan, with some of the structures in place for more than five years. The reforms target the sheds' appearances, frequency of...


John Hill | 27.02.2025

Headlines

The New Museum has announced it will reopen its expanded home on Manhattan's Bowery in fall 2025. The expansion, designed by OMA partners Rem Koolhaas and Shohei Shigematsu, links to the museum's iconic 2007 building designed by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of SANAA.


John Hill | 14.02.2025

Found

Christo and Jeanne-Claude: The Gates and Unrealized Projects for New York City is a new exhibition that opened at The Shed on February 12. The celebration of the 20th anniversary of Christo and Jeanne-Claude's installation of 7,503 saffron-colored gates in Central Park also features an...


HEMAA | 27.01.2025

Building of the Week

A seemingly unbuildable slice of land in Mexico City's Nuevo Polanco colonia, not far from Museo Soumaya and other cultural offerings, is now home to a skinny 13-story office building. Taking its name from the railroad tracks that created its fragmented site, Ferrocarril de Cuernavaca...


Lynnette Widder | 13.01.2025

Insight

Owen Hatherley’s Walking the Streets, Walking the Projects proposes the theory that, “in the 1960s, a new ideology emerged in New York. It held that cities thrived through the spontaneous ‘ballet of the streets’ and died when the state erected sterile projects.” This premise is then...


John Hill | 11.12.2024

Headlines

Two and a half years after Mexican architect Frida Escobedo was selected to design the Oscar L. Tang and H.M. Agnes Hsu-Tang Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, renderings have been released of what is notably the first wing designed by a woman in The Met's 154-year...


John Hill | 05.11.2024

Headlines

Sotheby's has announced its completion of the purchase of 945 Madison Avenue, the former Whitney Museum of American Art designed by Marcel Breuer in 1966, and the hiring of Herzog & de Meuron to lead the renovation of the building into the auction house's global headquarters.