2020

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Being an Architect is Hell – The Renovation Part 1

Life of an Architect

Being an Architect is hell. While I think it's one of the best jobs you can have, being an architect can complicate other aspects of your life, aspects that "regular" people can blissfully go about their lives completely, and at times, blissfully unaware.

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Bar Renovation – From Bad to Better

Life of an Architect

"Addition by Subtraction" was the theme for the renovation of my bar. The post Bar Renovation – From Bad to Better first appeared on Life of an Architect. Continue reading Bar Renovation – From Bad to Better at Life of an Architect.

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057: Renovating your House

Life of an Architect

Leaving your mark on the place where you live is built into the DNA of most architects and designers. Today we are talking about Renovating your House – the good, the bad, and (hopefully not) the ugly. The post 057: Renovating your House first appeared on Life of an Architect.

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Fireplace Renovation – The Long Haul

Life of an Architect

Renovating my house has not been awesome for so many reasons, but slowly and surely we are getting someplace with it all. Continue reading Fireplace Renovation – The Long Haul at Life of an Architect. The most recent item to be added to the "mostly" completed list is my fireplace. it is absolute and with malice.

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Being an Architect Is Hell – Painting and Contact Paper

Life of an Architect

Renovating your home is fun. Continue reading Being an Architect Is Hell – Painting and Contact Paper at Life of an Architect. as long as you have an unlimited budget and don't have to live there during the process.

Architect 108
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Historic ‘skyscraper hospital’ in Brooklyn refashioned into 17 luxury condominium residences

BD+C

Polhemus Residences is a 52,707-sf adaptive reuse, renovation, and restoration in the Cobble Hill Historic District Extension of Brooklyn. The enterprise converted the former Polhemus Memorial Clinic (1897), designed by the architect Marshall Emory, into 17 deluxe condominium residences. .

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Customized labs give universities a recruiting edge

BD+C

When Andrew Labov began his career with CO Architects in 1987, it wasn’t all that rare for universities to customize their labs for specific users. But over the years the cost of construction and renovation became prohibitive, so universities made their lab spaces as flexible as possible.