How Cities Finally Started Building for Everyone For more than a decade, the housing story across the world has been a grim loop: skyrocketing rents, stalled construction, slow approvals, and…
When Cities Change by Inches, Not Masterplans India’s cities rarely change all at once. They change slowly, in fragments, through ordinary acts of spatial care, in the form of a…
By 2100, the UN projects the global population will exceed 11 billion, requiring the construction of 2.4 trillion square feet of space—roughly the size of New York City every month…
In 1963, this material was invented by Stephanie Kwolek, from fibres of nylon polymers. The density of this material is high and low in weight. In comparison to steel, this…
The underlying idea was to design a house with a compact appearance using homogeneous materials, with a small enveloping surface and the largest possible usable area, which would serve a…

