1. ArchDaily
  2. Agua

Agua: The Latest Architecture and News

Urban Spaces for an Overheated Planet: 12 Projects that tackle this Global Challenge

Subscriber Access | 

Due to climate change, heat waves are becoming increasingly frequent and intense, and they present a critical challenge for the design of urban spaces. Elevated temperatures exacerbate public health issues, increase energy consumption, and diminish cities' overall quality of life. Urban design must adopt strategies that promote resilience to mitigate these effects rather than merely replicating traditional formats that do not address the thermal stress experienced by many.

For quite some time, we have recognized the positive effects of urban green spaces, interaction with nature, water, and soil, and the associated health and well-being benefits for residents living next to parks. The significance of this matter has been further underscored, particularly in the aftermath of the panic induced by the Covid-19 pandemic. However, the present moment once again highlights the influence of our urban models on modern life, now grappling with unprecedented extreme temperatures.

Urban Spaces for an Overheated Planet: 12 Projects that tackle this Global Challenge - Image 1 of 4Urban Spaces for an Overheated Planet: 12 Projects that tackle this Global Challenge - Image 2 of 4Urban Spaces for an Overheated Planet: 12 Projects that tackle this Global Challenge - Image 3 of 4Urban Spaces for an Overheated Planet: 12 Projects that tackle this Global Challenge - Image 4 of 4Urban Spaces for an Overheated Planet: 12 Projects that tackle this Global Challenge - More Images+ 14

La Quebradora Water Park in Mexico: Designing Public Spaces to Improve Water Management

Within the framework of implementing green infrastructure projects for water management in the Basin of Mexico, utilizing existing public spaces, La Quebradora Water Park emerges as the first proposal for hydro-urban acupuncture. The project, developed by the team from the Institute of Social Research at UNAM, coordinated by Manuel Perló Cohen and Loreta Castro Reguera Mancera, aims to transform the site's infiltration into a landmark of good water management, public space creation, and strengthening of the social fabric through four levels: infrastructure, park, city, and viewpoint. Addressing part of the water and social issues facing the area, the proposal transforms urban infrastructure into a public and recreational space for the community in a densely populated area with scarce public spaces.

La Quebradora Water Park in Mexico: Designing Public Spaces to Improve Water Management - Image 1 of 4La Quebradora Water Park in Mexico: Designing Public Spaces to Improve Water Management - Image 2 of 4La Quebradora Water Park in Mexico: Designing Public Spaces to Improve Water Management - Image 3 of 4La Quebradora Water Park in Mexico: Designing Public Spaces to Improve Water Management - Image 4 of 4La Quebradora Water Park in Mexico: Designing Public Spaces to Improve Water Management - More Images+ 17

Architecture Inspired by Permaculture: How to Integrate Its Design Principles Across Diverse Contexts

The concept of permaculture refers to a design system capable of creating sustainable human environments based on an ethic and a series of ecological, environmental, and resilience design principles. In contact with plants, animals, buildings, and infrastructures such as water, energy, and/or communications, permaculture analyzes the possible relationships between these elements based on their position in the landscape. Its 12 design principles can be applied in multiple architecture projects of varying scales and programs, contributing, for example, to the dissemination of new ways to reduce energy consumption in homes, save water through rainwater harvesting or the recycling of greywater for sanitary systems, gardens, and more, and participate in food production, among other matters.

In Seasonal Harmony - The Changing Nature of Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

Subscriber Access | 

This month marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of acclaimed American architect, visionary, and social critic Frank Lloyd Wright -considered by many to be one of the greatest architects of his time.

As a pioneer of the term 'organic architecture', one of his most iconic representative works is Fallingwater, set upon a waterfall in rural Pennsylvania. From its unveiling, the scheme has evoked enduring reflection on the relationship between man, architecture, and most prominently in Frank Lloyd Wright's mind - nature.