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How Can Clients Ruin Their Own Construction Projects?

The Architecture Designs

Project managers, architects, civil engineers, contractors, laborers, and other professionals work together to achieve the goals. Are clients any good in terms of construction projects? source: pinterest.com First things first, without clients and initiators, there would be no projects at all.

Client 52
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CLB Architects creates trio of "tectonic structures" for Wyoming residence

Deezen

US studio CLB Architects has created a retreat in rural Wyoming that has three wood-clad structures, with a creek running underneath the primary residence. Each building responds to its immediate surroundings Local firm CLB Architects carved away portions of the 6,000-square-foot (557-square-metre) building to form recesses and openings.

Structure 114
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Geodes inform design of Arizona research building by Grimshaw and Architekton

Deezen

Grimshaw and Architekton designed a research facility in Arizona Designed by global firm Grimshaw Architects and local studio Architekton , the building – formally known as the Rob and Melani Walton Center for Planetary Health – is the latest addition to a science-and-research district on the desert campus.

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Sister Lillian Murphy Community by Studio VARA and Paulett Taggart Architects

aasarchitecture

Designed in collaboration with Paulett Taggart Architects, as part of a 152-unit affordable housing development for Mercy Housing, the building’s four distinct blocks step down from seven to four stories and respond to the specific urban conditions of each frontage. Source by Studio VARA and Paulett Taggart Architects.

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Field Architecture clads flowing Sonoma house in copper

Deezen

Field Architecture has created a house in Sonoma Valley with copper-clad roofs Dry in the summers with heavy rainfall in the winter, the area's geography informed the design, as did the client's desire to co-inhabit the land with the region's plants and animals. "We

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"Shifting volumes" make up Cole Valley Residence in San Francisco by Jensen Architects

Deezen

US studio Jensen Architects has created a tall hillside home featuring expansive views and an elevator that will enable the owners to stay in the home as they age. The site's complex geology and the clients' desires inform a composition of shifting volumes that de?ne The residence replaces an older home that was on the property.

Architect 110
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Winter Visual Arts Center, Franklin & Marshall by Steven Hall Architects

aasarchitecture

The second-floor studios – for drawing, design, printmaking, painting, woodworking, and cinema – are efficiently organized around a ‘Commons’ gathering space for students which doubles as an informal presentation space. Source by Steven Hall Architects.