Architecture & Globalization
Examines how global flows of capital, labor, media, and culture shape architecture and cities. Includes cultural homogenization, global aesthetics, and transnational design practices.
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Rethinking the Brooklyn Marine Terminal

A Critique of the Vision Plan Abstract The recently approved Brooklyn Marine Terminal (BMT) Vision Plan represents one of New York City’s most ambitious waterfront redevelopment initiatives of the early twenty-first century. The plan integrates maritime modernization, mixed-income housing, public open space, and climate resilience strategies within a 122-acre site at the confluence of Red Continue reading
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Unhomely Homes: Dwelling as Dislocation in a Global Age

“We do not dwell because we have built, but we build and have built because we dwell.”— Martin Heidegger¹ At the root of Heidegger’s inquiry lies a rupture. His distinction between building and dwelling opens a chasm that continues to haunt architectural discourse: the ontological dissonance between shelter and home, between house and world. Yet Continue reading