ArchitectureDesignTracing the Legacy of Zaha Hadid, Architecture's Esteemed AnomalyBy Margaret RhodesDesignJourney Back to the Dreamy, Gorgeous Architecture of UtopiaBy Margaret RhodesDesignThe Secret Swagger of Berlin's Cold War-Era TowersBy April GlaserDesignSaving Water Is So Hot Right Now in Landscape DesignBy Margaret RhodesDesignTiny 3-D Printed Building Shares Its Energy With an (Also 3-D Printed) SUVBy Margaret RhodesDesignOnly Bjarke Ingels Could Make a Brick Building Look EtherealBy Liz StinsonDesignThe Strange, Messy History of Self-Sustaining HabitatsBy Liz StinsonDesignThe Unreal, Eerie Emptiness of China's 'Ghost Cities'By Laura MalloneeDesignThe Whimsical, Colorful 'Lonely Houses' of PortugalBy Taylor GlascockDesignThis Huge Cat's Cradle Embodies the Great Fugues of BachBy Liz StinsonDesignGet to Know Alejandro Aravena, the Pritzker Prize Winner Who Builds Half-Finished HomesBy Margaret RhodesDesignArchitecture's Most Prestigious Prize Goes to Alejandro AravenaBy Margaret RhodesDesignJapan's Minimalist Version of Lego Is Actually AwesomeBy Margaret RhodesDesignNew Times Square Kissing Booths Let You Make Out in PrivacyBy Liz StinsonDesignNYC's Nightmarish Penn Station Is Finally Getting a MakeoverBy Liz StinsonDesignThe Amazing Architecture That Captivated Us in 2015By Sam LubellDesignJapan Picks a New Design for Tokyo's 2020 Olympic StadiumBy Liz StinsonDesignNorth Korea's Capital Is Actually Colorful—Really ColorfulBy Laura MalloneeDesignThe Lowly Billboard Gets a Makeover on the Sunset StripBy Nate BergDesignThis Year's Design Miami Pavilion Has Odd Looks—And Unexpected CreatorsBy Margaret RhodesScienceArchitecture Builds on the Intricate Structure of BoneBy Shara TonnDesignWayne Thom, the Master Photographer Who Teased Out Brutalism's Elegant SideBy Sam LubellDesignTom Kundig's Buildings Are Half Machine, Half ArchitectureBy Liz StinsonDesignMoon Hoon's Fantastical, Mind-Bending Art and ArchitectureBy Sam LubellMore Stories