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Architect, a U.S. architecture magazine with focus on design, practice and technology The Architect's Newspaper , founded in 2003 and published in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago Architectural Forum (1892–1974), also known as The Brickbuilder and The Magazine of Building
The Blue Review, 1911–1913, London-based arts magazine; Blueprint, London-based magazine of architecture and design; BOMB Magazine, quarterly magazine edited by artists and writers, based in New York City, est. 1981; Border Crossings (magazine), quarterly arts and culture magazine edited and published in Winnipeg, Canada, est. 1982
Historic New England currently owns and operates 37 house museums and 1,284 acres of farmland and landscapes across five New England states, representing nearly 400 years of architecture. It also owns a wide-ranging collection of more than 100,000 objects of historical and aesthetic significance, the largest such assemblage of New England art ...
The magazine reverted to its original name in 1925, and was published for another thirteen years. Its final edition, volume 152, was published in 1938, when it was absorbed into Architectural Record. [1] The magazine was originally published by Ticknor and Company Publishers, based on Tremont Street in Boston, Massachusetts. [2]
The magazine was published by Joseph T. Buckingham and his son Edwin. The first edition was published in July 1831, and it published a total of 48 editions. After its final issue, in December 1835, the magazine merged with the New York-based American Monthly Magazine.
Frontispiece for the 1918 publication of Volumes III and IV in the series. The White Pine Series of Architectural Monographs, subtitled "A Bi-Monthly Publication Suggesting the Architectural Use of White Pine and Its Availability Today as a Structural Wood", was a landmark publication of drawings, photographs and descriptions of early American architecture.
The design and construction of buildings in evolving classical styles continued throughout the 20th and 21st centuries, even as modernist and other non-classical theories broke with the classical language of architecture. The New Classical movement is also tied to a resurgence in new traditional architecture, which emphasizes craftsmanship ...
In 1938, Life Magazine selected four modern architects and four traditional architects, asking them to prepare home designs for families in four income categories. In the category for people with $5,000 to $6,000 incomes, the modern design was by Frank Lloyd Wright and the traditional one by Royal Barry Wills.