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The Metrics We Use Decide the Cities We Build: Urban Indicators and Lived Experience

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Modern cities are running on performance indicators. They move millions of people each day, concentrate capital, separate land uses, and sustain complex systems of logistics and consumption. In that sense, the city functions as a system to be continually adjusted and optimized.

Today's dominant metrics are familiar and widely witnessed: vehicles per hour, average commute times, floor area ratios, parking turnover, housing starts, and tax revenue per parcel of land. These figures describe a city that is legible through efficiency. They are inherited from an industrial logic, where urban space is treated more like a production mechanism than a lived-in environment. In this framing, cities begin to mimic the needs and metrics of a machine.

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KAAP - Residential District and Circular Pavilion / Powerhouse Company + Orange Architects + NEXT architects

KAAP - Residential District and Circular Pavilion / Powerhouse Company + Orange Architects + NEXT architects - Exterior Photography, Apartments, CityscapeKAAP - Residential District and Circular Pavilion / Powerhouse Company + Orange Architects + NEXT architects - Exterior Photography, Apartments, BalconyKAAP - Residential District and Circular Pavilion / Powerhouse Company + Orange Architects + NEXT architects - Interior Photography, Apartments, Table, Chair, LightingKAAP - Residential District and Circular Pavilion / Powerhouse Company + Orange Architects + NEXT architects - Exterior Photography, ApartmentsKAAP - Residential District and Circular Pavilion / Powerhouse Company + Orange Architects + NEXT architects - More Images+ 17

Trommel Apartment / PLNLstudio

Trommel Apartment / PLNLstudio - Interior Photography, Apartment Interiors, Table, Lighting, ChairTrommel Apartment / PLNLstudio - Interior Photography, Apartment Interiors, Kitchen, CountertopTrommel Apartment / PLNLstudio - Apartment InteriorsTrommel Apartment / PLNLstudio - Interior Photography, Apartment Interiors, ChairTrommel Apartment / PLNLstudio - More Images+ 18

  • Architects: PLNLstudio
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  60
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2025
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Forbo Flooring Systems, Efapel, Winckelmans

Light House / Studioninedots

Light House / Studioninedots - Interior Photography, Sustainability, Kitchen, ChairLight House / Studioninedots - Interior Photography, Sustainability, ChairLight House / Studioninedots - Interior Photography, Sustainability, Stairs, HandrailLight House / Studioninedots - SustainabilityLight House / Studioninedots - More Images+ 29

  • Architects: Studioninedots
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  257
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2025
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Bouwmag, Seves Glassblock
  • Professionals: De Ingenieursgroep BV

De Nederlandsche Bank / Mecanoo

De Nederlandsche Bank / Mecanoo - Exterior Photography, Bank, CityscapeDe Nederlandsche Bank / Mecanoo - BankDe Nederlandsche Bank / Mecanoo - Interior Photography, Bank, StairsDe Nederlandsche Bank / Mecanoo - Interior Photography, Bank, StairsDe Nederlandsche Bank / Mecanoo - More Images+ 34

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Call for the international architectural competition for the National Slavery Museum

The City of Amsterdam has launched an international architectural competition for the design of the National Slavery Museum, in partnership with the National Slavery Museum Foundation.

White Arkitekter Designs Bio-Based Timber Neighbourhood Proposal for Hoofddorp, Netherlands

Timpaan, Blauwhoed and White Arkitekter, together with SeARCH, Space&Matter, Atlas Architects and DS Land Landschapsarchitecten, have been selected for the proposed development of The Erven, a timber-based neighbourhood planned for Hoofddorp in the Amsterdam metropolitan region. The winning proposal forms part of a major phase of the Lincolnpark area and outlines approximately 519 homes designed around four courtyards, or erven, inspired by the traditional Dutch farmstead.

Staal-Kade Office Building Transformation / Office Winhov

Staal-Kade Office Building Transformation / Office Winhov - Exterior Photography, SustainabilityStaal-Kade Office Building Transformation / Office Winhov - SustainabilityStaal-Kade Office Building Transformation / Office Winhov - Exterior Photography, Sustainability, FacadeStaal-Kade Office Building Transformation / Office Winhov - Interior Photography, Sustainability, ChairStaal-Kade Office Building Transformation / Office Winhov - More Images+ 30

Stories Residential Building / Olaf Gipser Architects

Stories Residential Building / Olaf Gipser Architects - Exterior Photography, Residential ArchitectureStories Residential Building / Olaf Gipser Architects - Exterior Photography, Residential ArchitectureStories Residential Building / Olaf Gipser Architects - Interior Photography, Residential Architecture, Table, Chair, LightingStories Residential Building / Olaf Gipser Architects - Interior Photography, Residential Architecture, Deck, Balcony, HandrailStories Residential Building / Olaf Gipser Architects - More Images+ 19

Nautical Residential Beacon / Civic Architects

Nautical Residential Beacon / Civic Architects - Exterior Photography, Residential ArchitectureNautical Residential Beacon / Civic Architects - Interior Photography, Residential Architecture, BalconyNautical Residential Beacon / Civic Architects - Drawings, Residential Architecture, BalconyNautical Residential Beacon / Civic Architects - Exterior Photography, Residential ArchitectureNautical Residential Beacon / Civic Architects - More Images+ 11

  • Architects: Civic Architects
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1915
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  HSB

DPG Mediavaert Headquarters / Team V Architecture

DPG Mediavaert Headquarters / Team V Architecture - Exterior Photography, Commercial ArchitectureDPG Mediavaert Headquarters / Team V Architecture - Exterior Photography, Commercial ArchitectureDPG Mediavaert Headquarters / Team V Architecture - Commercial ArchitectureDPG Mediavaert Headquarters / Team V Architecture - Interior Photography, Commercial Architecture, Stairs, Column, ChairDPG Mediavaert Headquarters / Team V Architecture - More Images+ 11

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  9999
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Ginkel Groep , Harry van Interieurbouw, Interalu, MAARS, Mutsaerts, +8

The August Social Housing / Team V Architecture

The August Social Housing / Team V Architecture - Exterior Photography, Social Housing, BalconyThe August Social Housing / Team V Architecture - Exterior Photography, Social Housing, BalconyThe August Social Housing / Team V Architecture - Social HousingThe August Social Housing / Team V Architecture - Interior Photography, Social Housing, BalconyThe August Social Housing / Team V Architecture - More Images+ 19

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  13
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Byldis, Cor Unum, Ginkel Groep , Tichelaar

Serious Play: The Subversive Designs of Lina Bo Bardi and Aldo van Eyck

Aldo van Eyck and Lina Bo Bardi were two subversive figures. Their visions of collectivity and playfulness—though applied to very different kinds of structures—shared a common ground: an idea of architecture that goes beyond design. For both, architecture was a living space, animated by appropriation, movement, and exchange. From Dutch playgrounds to thw São Paulo Museum of Art, their ideals intertwined, reinforcing the notion of an architecture where anyone could become a child again.

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Unconventional Playgrounds: Built from Junk, Shaped by Concrete, Freed by Play

What if the best kind of play isn't the safest? For decades, cities have built playgrounds to be clean, colorful, and easy to supervise. Yet these spaces—designed more for adult peace of mind than for children's curiosity—often strip away what makes play truly transformative: risk, unpredictability, and self-direction. Rising safety standards, shrinking public space, and the commercialization of play equipment have only further narrowed the possibilities for children's independent exploration. From a junkyard in 1940s Copenhagen to the concrete landscapes of postwar Amsterdam, a handful of architects, planners, and activists have challenged the idea that play must be neat and controlled. Their unconventional playgrounds—made of loose parts, raw materials, and abstract forms—gave children the freedom to build, demolish, explore, and get dirty.

Unconventional Playgrounds: Built from Junk, Shaped by Concrete, Freed by Play - Image 1 of 4Unconventional Playgrounds: Built from Junk, Shaped by Concrete, Freed by Play - Image 2 of 4Unconventional Playgrounds: Built from Junk, Shaped by Concrete, Freed by Play - Image 3 of 4Unconventional Playgrounds: Built from Junk, Shaped by Concrete, Freed by Play - Image 4 of 4Unconventional Playgrounds: Built from Junk, Shaped by Concrete, Freed by Play - More Images+ 8

Playgrounds as Political Spaces: Negotiating Risk, Space, and Childhood

Playgrounds are spatial instruments through which society projects its expectations on childhood, testing the boundaries between control and autonomy, exposure and protection. They regulate how children relate to space, to others, and their bodies — encoding, often invisibly, social norms, fears, and aspirations. In this sense, playgrounds are not peripheral spaces of leisure; they are political constructs shaped by specific ideologies about what childhood is and how it should unfold. Since 1989, the right to play has been formally recognised in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, affirming that play is a fundamental part of human development. To design a playground is not only to draw lines on a plan or to install equipment in a park; it is to define the conditions under which play is permitted, imagined, or constrained.

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UK Terminal Amsterdam Centraal Station / Superimpose Architecture + architectural studio ZJA

UK Terminal Amsterdam Centraal Station / Superimpose Architecture + architectural studio ZJA - Interior DesignUK Terminal Amsterdam Centraal Station / Superimpose Architecture + architectural studio ZJA - Interior Photography, Interior DesignUK Terminal Amsterdam Centraal Station / Superimpose Architecture + architectural studio ZJA - Interior DesignUK Terminal Amsterdam Centraal Station / Superimpose Architecture + architectural studio ZJA - Interior DesignUK Terminal Amsterdam Centraal Station / Superimpose Architecture + architectural studio ZJA - More Images+ 23

How Amsterdam Uses the Doughnut Economics Model to Create a Balanced Strategy for Both the People and the Environment

In 2020, in the midst of the first wave of lockdowns due to the pandemic, the municipality of Amsterdam announced its strategy for recovering from this crisis by embracing the concept of the “Doughnut Economy.” The model is developed by British economist Kate Raworth and popularized through her book, “Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist”, released in 2017. Here, she argues that the true purpose of economics does not have to equal growth. Instead, the aim is to find a sweet spot, a way to balance the need to provide everyone with what they need to live a good life, a “social foundation” while limiting our impact on the environment, “the environmental ceiling.” With the help of Raworth, Amsterdam has downscaled this approach to the size of a city. The model is now used to inform city-wide strategies and developments in support of this overarching idea: providing a good quality of life for all without putting additional pressure on the planet. Other cities are following this example.

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Houtrak Apartments / Workshop Architecten + Marcel Lok Architect

Houtrak Apartments / Workshop Architecten + Marcel Lok Architect - Exterior Photography, Residential Architecture, BalconyHoutrak Apartments / Workshop Architecten + Marcel Lok Architect - Exterior Photography, Residential ArchitectureHoutrak Apartments / Workshop Architecten + Marcel Lok Architect - Interior Photography, Residential Architecture, ChairHoutrak Apartments / Workshop Architecten + Marcel Lok Architect - Exterior Photography, Residential Architecture, CityscapeHoutrak Apartments / Workshop Architecten + Marcel Lok Architect - More Images+ 35

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  3339
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2025
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Sorba, Webo