- all (11)
- viewpoints (3)
- profiles (4)
- projects (3)
- products (1)
Zach Mortice
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Projects
This Botanical Garden’s New Addition Is as Subtle as Light and Shadow
Whispers of texture and nature pull visitors through the Missouri Botanical Garden’s new visitor center and into the landscape beyond.
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Viewpoints
The Landscape Architecture–AI Buffer Zone
How long can the idiosyncrasies of landscape architecture keep the promise and peril of artificial intelligence at bay?
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Viewpoints
The National Trust for Historic Preservation Helps Tell the Stories of Historic Black Churches
Mother Bethel AME in Philadelphia sits on the longest Black-owned piece of land in the country. Part of the National Trust's $4 million in grant funding will restore the church’s iconic stained-glass windows.
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Products
2 Books for Your Winter Reading List
These new must-read titles unpack the histories that shaped architecture and design today.
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Profiles
Meet the Urban Planners Reshaping Resilience in Mexico
ORU’s resilient urbanism transforms chain-link and concrete blocks into cultural infrastructure.
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Projects
How a Health Care Clinic Applied Trauma Informed Design to Serve the LGBTQIA+ Community
With space for public programs as well as a sense of privacy and security Perkins&Will’s Family Tree Clinic answers the question, “What does healing look like to you?”
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Profiles
Mary Dill Henry’s Life-Long Search for the “Vital Forces” of Art and Technology
A newly resurfaced archive at the Illinois Institute of Technology reveals an artist always in motion.
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Viewpoints
An HBCU’s Historic Preservation Program Starts with Its Own Campus
Uncovering history from Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Movement, students at Tuskegee University take a hands-on role in preserving history on campus and beyond.
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Profiles
Could Be Architecture Says Friendly Design Makes Us Kinder Humans
The young Chicago firm applies its exuberant style to homes, installations, and local watering holes.
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Projects
The North Lawndale Employment Network Sees Through Employment Barriers for the Formerly Incarcerated
Designed by Wheeler Kearns Architects, the center makes use of a former bank that now holds sweeter treasure—honey.
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Profiles
Edward Lyons Pryce, the Black Landscape Architect that Preserved the Tuskegee Institute
A new scholarship will continue Pryce’s legacy as one of the first Black landscape architects.