1. ArchDaily
  2. MET

MET: The Latest Architecture and News

From Design Movements to Materials: Reflecting on Architectural Exhibitions in 2024

Reflecting on 2024, numerous architectural exhibitions have opened worldwide, addressing various themes, exhibition formats, and featured architects. Architectural design and architecture practice influence our daily lives in subtle and often unnoticed ways, where the end-users embrace built environments as they are. This reaction may arise from a combination of factors, such as a sense of powerlessness to enact significant change after a building is constructed or the experience of growing up in environments over which individuals had little or no agency in shaping. For these reasons, architectural exhibitions serve an essential purpose, offering society a chance to pause, reflect, and critically examine the myriad issues that surface during designing and building. These issues are often overlooked or need to be acknowledged, as practitioners may prioritize delivering projects within strict timelines over exploring more profound reflections.

In 2024, museums, galleries, and curators responded to the evolving challenges within the built environment with various approaches. Some exhibitions questioned the ethics of building materials and the practices behind supply chains, drawing attention to the broader implications of material choices. Others focused on documenting architectural movements worldwide, emphasizing their cultural and historical significance and the urgent need to preserve and adapt rather than replace them with entirely new builds. These efforts highlight the role of exhibitions in raising awareness about pressing issues while fostering a more critical dialogue about the architectural discipline.

From Design Movements to Materials: Reflecting on Architectural Exhibitions in 2024 - Image 1 of 4From Design Movements to Materials: Reflecting on Architectural Exhibitions in 2024 - Image 2 of 4From Design Movements to Materials: Reflecting on Architectural Exhibitions in 2024 - Image 3 of 4From Design Movements to Materials: Reflecting on Architectural Exhibitions in 2024 - Image 4 of 4From Design Movements to Materials: Reflecting on Architectural Exhibitions in 2024 - More Images+ 20

The MET Museum Reveals Design of a New Wing in New York by Architect Frida Escobedo

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has unveiled the design for a new wing dedicated to its 20th- and 21st-century art collection. Architect Frida Escobedo, the first woman to design a Met wing, is leading the project. The Oscar L. Tang and H.M. Agnes Hsu-Tang Wing will increase gallery space by almost 50 percent, adding over 70,000 square feet. This expansion will address accessibility issues, improve infrastructure, and enhance the sustainability of the building. The opening of the new wing is anticipated in 2030.

The MET Museum Reveals Design of a New Wing in New York by Architect Frida Escobedo - Image 1 of 4The MET Museum Reveals Design of a New Wing in New York by Architect Frida Escobedo - Image 2 of 4The MET Museum Reveals Design of a New Wing in New York by Architect Frida Escobedo - Image 3 of 4The MET Museum Reveals Design of a New Wing in New York by Architect Frida Escobedo - Image 4 of 4The MET Museum Reveals Design of a New Wing in New York by Architect Frida Escobedo - More Images+ 1

The MET Opens Exhibition on the Diverse Career of Underrecognized Modernist Architect Paul Rudolph

The Metropolitan Museum of Art has opened a major exhibition focused on the diverse and innovative career of Paul Rudolph, a second-generation Modernist architect whose work stands alongside luminaries such as Eero Saarinen and I.M. Pei. Titled "Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph," the exhibition is on display from September 30, 2024, to March 16, 2025, covering a wide spectrum of Rudolph's architectural contributions, from his experimental houses in Florida, through civic projects, to visionary urban megastructures and mixed-use skyscrapers.

The MET Opens Exhibition on the Diverse Career of Underrecognized Modernist Architect Paul Rudolph - Image 1 of 4The MET Opens Exhibition on the Diverse Career of Underrecognized Modernist Architect Paul Rudolph - Image 2 of 4The MET Opens Exhibition on the Diverse Career of Underrecognized Modernist Architect Paul Rudolph - Image 3 of 4The MET Opens Exhibition on the Diverse Career of Underrecognized Modernist Architect Paul Rudolph - Image 4 of 4The MET Opens Exhibition on the Diverse Career of Underrecognized Modernist Architect Paul Rudolph - More Images+ 8

Heavenly Bodies / Diller Scofidio + Renfro

Heavenly Bodies / Diller Scofidio + Renfro - Installation, ColumnHeavenly Bodies / Diller Scofidio + Renfro - InstallationHeavenly Bodies / Diller Scofidio + Renfro - Installation, Courtyard, Arcade, Arch, Column, FacadeHeavenly Bodies / Diller Scofidio + Renfro - Installation, Arch, ArcadeHeavenly Bodies / Diller Scofidio + Renfro - More Images+ 27

Moroccan Court / New Galleries at the MET / Achva Benzinberg Stein

Subscriber Access | 
Moroccan Court / New Galleries at the MET / Achva Benzinberg Stein - Image 3 of 4
© Achva Stein

Earlier this week, we had the pleasure of touring the Metropolitan Museum of Art ‘New Galleries for the Art of the Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia, and Later South Asia’ with Achva Stein on its opening day. Stein, a principal of an ASLA award-winning landscape architecture and design firm Benzinberg Stein Associates and the founding Director of the Graduate program in Landscape Architecture at the Spitzer School of Architecture at the City College of New York, was asked to join the MET’s endeavors after her noted publication, Morocco: Courtyards and Gardens, showcased her passion for and understanding of the country’s varied garden types found in regions such as Marrakech and Fez. For the new wing, Stein has created a fantastic 14th century Maghrebi-Andalusian-style courtyard that goes beyond a mere representation, and truly infuses the spirit and essence of a Moroccan court into a small interior space of the MET.

More about our trip to the MET after the break.