Domus 1034 on newsstands: “Room for diversity”

Global affordable housing, design with humour, putting nature to work. Browse this gallery to discover the features included in the April issue.

The work of Claude Cormier Every year, from May to September, Sainte- Catherine Street East becomes a pedestrian mall for the Aires Libres cultural event. The Canadian office’s installation in 2018 strung 180,000 balls of recycled plastic to form a canopy above the street inspired by the colours of the flag of the LGBTQI+ community.

Text Christiane Bürklein, photo Jean-François Savaria

We need 600 million homes Social housing is a human right: the challenge is how to deal with the problem. If government policies are inadequate, we have to accept that citizens themselves can make a big contribution.

Text Frederique van Andel, photo Nelson Ching / Bloomberg via Getty Images

(Un)affordable New York Karen Kubey, guest editor of the recent volume Housing as Intervention: Architecture towards Social Equity, gives us an overview of the state of subsidised housing in New York.

Text Karen Kubey, photo Reed Young

Change by art The Spanish collective engages with art among people as a crucial tool for social change and development.

Text Adriana Cantis

Doubling the planet Architecture questions the mirror as a way to solve its problems of identity and aesthetics.

Text Marco Biraghi, photo Ekkehard Altenburger

German birdcages How are Oswald Mathias Ungers’s compositional ordering principles translated into German architecture today?

Text Klaus Englert, photo Michael Kappeler, Picture Alliance

The hidden dragons Gli Istituti per la progettazione in Cina: un ibrido tra burocrazia e carisma.

Text Guanghui Ding, Charlie Xue. Photo Fu Xing, courtesy of BIAD

Bigger, better and still affordable Architectural priorities are challenged in the revolutionary renovations carried out by the studio Lacaton & Vassal.

Text Anatxu Zabalbeascoa, photo Philippe Ruault

NYC: trees are finally coming! Commodifying the urban forest: how much is it worth? Towards a natural infrastructure.

Testo Stephanie Carlisle, Nicholas Pevzner. Foto Richard Hallett

A clearing in the forest Skanderbeg square, Tirana, Albania. A sense of memory resurfaces after Albania’s most symbolic square is restructured.

Project 51N4E, photo Blerta Kambo

Design with nature Algae[crete], project: Institute for Advanced Architecture of  Catalonia (IAAC), Barcelona; student: Fabio M. Rivera; thesis advisor: Marcos Cruz (C-Biom–A Research Line), 2018

Salone del Mobile Milan: (in)tangible impact The legacy of Design Week for Milan is the capacity to generate continual transformations of the built environment, with virtuous repercussions for citizens’ lives.

Text, research, infographics Stefano Andreani

Guest editor Winy Maas opens this issue of Domus discussing how inequality is rising on the planet and how it directly affects living in cities. The only possibile solution is building new houses, that have to be affordable, green and sustainable.

Humour, please: we feature the work of Claude Cormier, a Canadian landscape architect who intervenes in cities with the precise intent to create beauty. 18 Shades of Gay, his 1 km long installation in Montrèal, appears on Domus’ cover this month.
Professor Marja Eisinga, interviewed by Domus, says that we need 600 million homes. Social housing is a human right”, according to her, and the challenge is how to deal with the problem if government policies are inadequate.

New York. Karen Kubey, guest editor of the recent volume Housing as Intervention: Architecture towards Social Equality, gives us an overview of subsidied housing in a city that’s becoming unaffordable and less and less diverse. But we cover also NYC urban forest: in 2007 the mayor Bloomberg pledged to plant one million trees is the biggest reforestation project of its kind in the US. How much is the forest worth? Trees are also a key element in the requalification of Tirana’s main square, that now appears, now that the second phase is completed, as a clearing in the forest.  

Arts. Boa Mistura is a spanish collective which Winy Maas appreciates a lot for their use of colour and art as a tool for social change and development. What’s behind their interventions? We had a chat with them about projects, processes and their contribute to society.

Domus 1034, April 2019

Architecture. Doubling the planet is a selection of projects through which architecture questions the mirror as a way to solve its problems of identity and aesthetics. We also analyze how Oswald Mathias Hungers compositional ordering principles are translated into German architecture today and the role of China’s Design Institute, a hybrid organization between bureaucracy and charisma. Anatxu Zabalbeascoa, architecture critic of El Pais, has selected the revolutionary renovations of Lacaton & Vassal on three buildings in Bordeaux as a good example of projects that don’t demolish, but repair, saving the social housing legacy.    

Design. We’ve collected five projects which demonstrate that it’s possible to design with nature, using bio-materials and creating artificial ecologies.
April is the month of Milano Design Week: we explain what it is its impact on the city. Its legacy for Milan is the capacity to generate continual transformations of the built environment, with virtuous repercussions for citizens’ lives. Editorial director Walter Mariotti interviews Claudio Luti, president of the Salone del Mobile, president and owner of Kartell.

The work of Claude Cormier Text Christiane Bürklein, photo Jean-François Savaria

Every year, from May to September, Sainte- Catherine Street East becomes a pedestrian mall for the Aires Libres cultural event. The Canadian office’s installation in 2018 strung 180,000 balls of recycled plastic to form a canopy above the street inspired by the colours of the flag of the LGBTQI+ community.

We need 600 million homes Text Frederique van Andel, photo Nelson Ching / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Social housing is a human right: the challenge is how to deal with the problem. If government policies are inadequate, we have to accept that citizens themselves can make a big contribution.

(Un)affordable New York Text Karen Kubey, photo Reed Young

Karen Kubey, guest editor of the recent volume Housing as Intervention: Architecture towards Social Equity, gives us an overview of the state of subsidised housing in New York.

Change by art Text Adriana Cantis

The Spanish collective engages with art among people as a crucial tool for social change and development.

Doubling the planet Text Marco Biraghi, photo Ekkehard Altenburger

Architecture questions the mirror as a way to solve its problems of identity and aesthetics.

German birdcages Text Klaus Englert, photo Michael Kappeler, Picture Alliance

How are Oswald Mathias Ungers’s compositional ordering principles translated into German architecture today?

The hidden dragons Text Guanghui Ding, Charlie Xue. Photo Fu Xing, courtesy of BIAD

Gli Istituti per la progettazione in Cina: un ibrido tra burocrazia e carisma.

Bigger, better and still affordable Text Anatxu Zabalbeascoa, photo Philippe Ruault

Architectural priorities are challenged in the revolutionary renovations carried out by the studio Lacaton & Vassal.

NYC: trees are finally coming! Testo Stephanie Carlisle, Nicholas Pevzner. Foto Richard Hallett

Commodifying the urban forest: how much is it worth? Towards a natural infrastructure.

A clearing in the forest Project 51N4E, photo Blerta Kambo

Skanderbeg square, Tirana, Albania. A sense of memory resurfaces after Albania’s most symbolic square is restructured.

Design with nature

Algae[crete], project: Institute for Advanced Architecture of  Catalonia (IAAC), Barcelona; student: Fabio M. Rivera; thesis advisor: Marcos Cruz (C-Biom–A Research Line), 2018

Salone del Mobile Milan: (in)tangible impact Text, research, infographics Stefano Andreani

The legacy of Design Week for Milan is the capacity to generate continual transformations of the built environment, with virtuous repercussions for citizens’ lives.