This week's best stories and comments from Dezeen View online |
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This week, readers are debating China's plans to build a hospital in just a few days to help treat coronavirus, and are divided after BIG's proposal for the Two World Trade Center was scrapped in favour of a Foster + Partners design. Read on for more... |
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News that the Chinese government is rapidly building a 1,000-bed hospital to help treat patients with coronavirus has sparked debate. Read more › |
Readers are upset to learn that Frank Lloyd Wright's School of Architecture at Taliesin will shut due to a financial disagreement. Read more › |
The developer of New York's World Trade Center site has axed BIG's Two World Trade Center design in favour of an earlier proposal. Read more › |
Commenters are divided after Bjarke Ingels released a statement defending his decision to meet with Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro. Read more › |
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Readers think that Byongseon Bae wasted her time redesigning a drill to replace its characteristic gun shape with a sleek alternative. Read more › |
Readers aren't sold on the concept for an IKEA store that's being built in Vienna without any car-parking spaces and adorned with over 100 trees. Read more › |
One commenter thinks that this house in Japan, clad in black corrugated metal with sliding doors that reveal white walls, is swan-like. Read more › |
The official logo of the US Space Force has proven controversial with readers who are calling it a Star Trek knock-off. Read more › |
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The brick piers of an old Victorian coach house are incorporated in the facade of this skinny house in New Cross, London, by Selencky Parsons. Read more › |
Layer has developed a concept for an autonomous ride-sharing service that avoids the guilt of booking single-passenger-journeys. Read more › |
Architects Peter McNeil and Clarissa Nam have built two detached houses on a corner lot in Toronto and they are a hit with readers. Read more › |
One commenter thinks that Kengo Kuma's The Exchange in Sydney, Australia, looks like a walnut whip thanks to its ribboned exterior. Read more › |
David Adjaye has impressed readers with his use of pink-tinted concrete to form a "tough and gentle" store for The Webster in Los Angeles. Read more › |
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