Intergenerational co-living promises care and connection—but who benefits when housing becomes lifestyle branding?
Intergenerational co-living promises care and connection—but who benefits when housing becomes lifestyle branding?
Performing arts venues are becoming flexible ecosystems as architecture, finance, and programming collide in a new survival model.
How 2026 World Cup fan zones, plazas, and screens are testing whether civic space can survive after the spectacle leaves.
Bangkok’s recyclable ribbon canopy argues for lightweight shade as civic infrastructure in cities battling heat, congestion, and change.
Coffee shops are evolving into global luxury chains, selling atmosphere, community and local credibility in one scalable format.
If arts participation slows aging, culture may be infrastructure, not luxury. Can cities justify it through health policy?
Johnston Marklee’s green-metal tower in Phoenix asks whether high-rise housing can feel civic, humane, and climate-aware.
