1. ArchDaily
  2. Modernism

Modernism: The Latest Architecture and News

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Residence Purchased by the Mississippi Museum of Art and Prepared for Public Tours

On November 20, 2025, the Mississippi Museum of Art (MMA) confirmed the purchase of Fountainhead, a house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1948 and completed in 1954. The renowned modernist architect designed the residence and its furnishings for oil businessman J. Willis Hughes, who lived there with his family until 1980. Established in 1911, the MMA is the largest art museum in the state of Mississippi, offering exhibitions, public programs, artistic and community partnerships, educational initiatives, and opportunities for exchange year-round through a permanent collection of paintings, photography, multimedia works, and sculpture. The purchase is part of the Museum's goal to embed itself in neighborhoods across the city in ways that support its community-building priorities, making the architectural landmark available to the public for tours with reservations. The initiative is inspired by institutions such as the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, which acquired the Wright-designed Bachman-Wilson House in 2015.

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Residence Purchased by the Mississippi Museum of Art and Prepared for Public Tours - Image 1 of 4Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Residence Purchased by the Mississippi Museum of Art and Prepared for Public Tours - Image 2 of 4Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Residence Purchased by the Mississippi Museum of Art and Prepared for Public Tours - Image 3 of 4Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Residence Purchased by the Mississippi Museum of Art and Prepared for Public Tours - Image 4 of 4Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Residence Purchased by the Mississippi Museum of Art and Prepared for Public Tours - More Images+ 65

Moroccan Modern: The Architecture of Jean-François Zevaco

Subscriber Access | 

Modernism has a long history in Morocco. Being close to Europe and under French Protectorate rule, it kept pace with architectural developments in the movement. Its relative peace after the Second World War further strengthened its role as some European architects sought a hub for new ideas. Architects in independent Morocco adopted Modernism as they were tasked to build the infrastructure of a new nation. The architect Jean-François Zevaco, born in Morocco to French parents, practiced across these formative periods, developing his own expressive version of modern architecture.

Moroccan Modern: The Architecture of Jean-François Zevaco - Image 1 of 4Moroccan Modern: The Architecture of Jean-François Zevaco - Image 2 of 4Moroccan Modern: The Architecture of Jean-François Zevaco - Image 3 of 4Moroccan Modern: The Architecture of Jean-François Zevaco - Image 4 of 4Moroccan Modern: The Architecture of Jean-François Zevaco - More Images+ 13

Nordic Influences in America: The Last 25 Years

Organized by ASF with Susan Chin of DesignConnects, in collaboration with the American Institute of Architects New York, and American Institute of Architects Continental Europe, Nordic American Connections: Conversations on Architecture and Design is a 4-part series that presents prominent architects, critics and scholars to reflect on Scandinavian and Nordic design's enduring impact in shaping modern American design since the 19th century.

Dallas Evaluates Repair and Demolition Options for I.M. Pei’s Modernist City Hall

Since August 2025, debate has intensified in Dallas, United States, over the future of one of its modern landmarks: I.M. Pei & Partners' Dallas City Hall. This month, the Dallas City Council will continue weighing whether to repair, sell, or demolish the 47-year-old building, following growing concerns over long-deferred maintenance and the need for major investment. In late October, council members began public listening sessions and committee meetings to gather resident input. Preservationists and some council members urged a full study of repair options and historic landmarking, while others emphasized fiscal and operational concerns.

Supporters of preservation stress the building's civic and architectural significance, while those advocating for demolition point to high maintenance costs and the redevelopment potential of the centrally located site. A petition to "Save Dallas City Hall," calling on council members to halt demolition plans and commission a transparent renovation study, remains open for signatures. Meanwhile, the mayor has said he wants to review all the facts before taking a position on whether the city should relocate or invest in repairs. The case adds to the growing list of modernist icons worldwide facing uncertain futures, sparking broader cultural debates about civic heritage and public infrastructure.

Dallas Evaluates Repair and Demolition Options for I.M. Pei’s Modernist City Hall - Image 1 of 4Dallas Evaluates Repair and Demolition Options for I.M. Pei’s Modernist City Hall - Image 2 of 4Dallas Evaluates Repair and Demolition Options for I.M. Pei’s Modernist City Hall - Image 3 of 4Dallas Evaluates Repair and Demolition Options for I.M. Pei’s Modernist City Hall - Image 4 of 4Dallas Evaluates Repair and Demolition Options for I.M. Pei’s Modernist City Hall - More Images

Staging Culture: The Architect as Curator

Architecture has never been confined to the act of building. It constantly negotiates between material practice and intellectual reflection, yet throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, many architects felt that the built project alone was insufficient to address the full range of questions facing the discipline. Economic pressures, political contexts, and programmatic demands often narrowed the scope of practice.

Exhibitions and curatorial platforms, by contrast, created spaces of experimentation and critique, opening arenas where architecture could interrogate itself, where its past could be reinterpreted, its present challenged, and its future projected. In this tension, the figure of the architect-curator emerged, treating curating itself as a form of design — not of walls or facades, but of discourse, narratives, and frameworks of meaning.

Staging Culture: The Architect as Curator - Image 1 of 4Staging Culture: The Architect as Curator - Image 2 of 4Staging Culture: The Architect as Curator - Image 3 of 4Staging Culture: The Architect as Curator - Image 4 of 4Staging Culture: The Architect as Curator - More Images+ 32

Bridging Past and Future: Uzbekistan’s Expanding Cultural Landscape

Uzbekistan's architectural and artistic heritage reflects a layered history shaped by centuries of cultural exchange along the Silk Road. From the monumental ensembles of Samarkand and Bukhara to the scientific and educational institutions of the Timurid era, architecture has long been a vessel of identity and knowledge across the region. In the twentieth century, Tashkent emerged as a new urban laboratory, where modernist ideals met local craft traditions and environmental pragmatism. The city's reconstruction following the 1966 earthquake became a defining moment, fusing Soviet urbanism with regional aesthetics to produce a distinctly Central Asian expression of modernity, one that translated cultural continuity into concrete, glass, and light.

Bridging Past and Future: Uzbekistan’s Expanding Cultural Landscape - Image 1 of 4Bridging Past and Future: Uzbekistan’s Expanding Cultural Landscape - Image 2 of 4Bridging Past and Future: Uzbekistan’s Expanding Cultural Landscape - Image 3 of 4Bridging Past and Future: Uzbekistan’s Expanding Cultural Landscape - Image 4 of 4Bridging Past and Future: Uzbekistan’s Expanding Cultural Landscape - More Images+ 4

Hilversum Town Hall: Willem Dudok’s Monument to Civic Architecture

Subscriber Access | 

In the Dutch city of Hilversum, a municipal building completed in 1931 redefined the very idea of what a town hall could be. More than a house for local administration, the Hilversum Town Hall became the architectural expression of a community in transformation. With its tower rising above reflective ponds, its brick masses composed around courtyards, and its carefully detailed interiors, the building asserted that civic architecture could unite function with symbolism, efficiency with ceremony.

The architect behind this vision, Willem Marinus Dudok, was not only responsible for individual buildings but for the broader shaping of Hilversum itself. As a city architect and planner, he designed schools, housing districts, and parks, developing a language that fused Dutch craftsmanship with Modernist clarity. The town hall represented the culmination of this trajectory: a civic centerpiece where urban ambition, material refinement, and human scale converged in a single, coherent form.

Hilversum Town Hall: Willem Dudok’s Monument to Civic Architecture - Image 1 of 4Hilversum Town Hall: Willem Dudok’s Monument to Civic Architecture - Image 2 of 4Hilversum Town Hall: Willem Dudok’s Monument to Civic Architecture - Image 3 of 4Hilversum Town Hall: Willem Dudok’s Monument to Civic Architecture - Image 4 of 4Hilversum Town Hall: Willem Dudok’s Monument to Civic Architecture - More Images+ 24

Choreographing Space: Architecture and Dance as Interdisciplinary Practices

"Dance, dance… otherwise we are lost." This oft-cited phrase by Pina Bausch encapsulates not only the urgency of movement, but its capacity to reveal space itself. In her choreographies, space is never a neutral backdrop, it becomes a partner, an obstacle, a memory. Floors tilt, chairs accumulate, walls oppress or liberate. These are architectural conditions, staged and contested through the body. What Bausch exposes — and what architecture often forgets — is that space is not simply built, it is performed. Her work invites architects to think not only in terms of materials and forms, but of gestures, relations, and rhythms. It suggests that architecture, like dance, is ultimately about how we inhabit, structure, and emotionally charge the spaces we move through.

Historically, architecture and dance have operated in parallel, shaping human experience through the body's orientation in space and time. From the choreographed rituals of classical temples to the axial logics of Baroque palaces, built space has always implied movement. The Bauhaus took this further, as Oskar Schlemmer's Triadic Ballet visualized space as a geometric extension of the body. This was not scenery, but spatial thinking made kinetic. In the 20th century, choreographers like William Forsythe and Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker integrated architectural constraints into their scores, while architects such as Steven Holl, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, and Toyo Ito designed buildings that unfold as spatial sequences, inviting movement, drift, and delay.

Choreographing Space: Architecture and Dance as Interdisciplinary Practices - Image 1 of 4Choreographing Space: Architecture and Dance as Interdisciplinary Practices - Image 2 of 4Choreographing Space: Architecture and Dance as Interdisciplinary Practices - Image 3 of 4Choreographing Space: Architecture and Dance as Interdisciplinary Practices - Image 4 of 4Choreographing Space: Architecture and Dance as Interdisciplinary Practices - More Images+ 35

From Ruin to Cultural Hub: The Transformation of Zanzibar's Majestic Cinema

Subscriber Access | 

In historic Stone Town, the main city in Zanzibar, Tanzania, the story of one cinema building and its imminent restoration is reflective of the city's history and the narrative of cinemas generally. The early twentieth century saw the advent of cinema construction, peaking in mid-century, before declining against competition with multiplexes and home television. While many were demolished or irreparably altered, many also lay abandoned, like time capsules for a bygone era. They are a snapshot of the architecture styles and methods of their time, acting as a reminder of their role in their communities. Restoring and adapting a cinema like the Majestic is a recognition of its heritage and community value.

From Ruin to Cultural Hub: The Transformation of Zanzibar's Majestic Cinema - Image 1 of 4From Ruin to Cultural Hub: The Transformation of Zanzibar's Majestic Cinema - Image 2 of 4From Ruin to Cultural Hub: The Transformation of Zanzibar's Majestic Cinema - Image 3 of 4From Ruin to Cultural Hub: The Transformation of Zanzibar's Majestic Cinema - Image 4 of 4From Ruin to Cultural Hub: The Transformation of Zanzibar's Majestic Cinema - More Images+ 11

A Modernist Church Set in Stone: The Story Behind the Temppeliaukio Kirkko in Helsinki, Finland

Subscriber Access | 

Near the center of Helsinki, Finland, in the Töölö neighborhood, one can find the Temppeliaukio Church, an unusual-looking Lutheran church nestled between granite rocks. Approaching the square from Fredrikinkatu street, the church appears subtly, a flat dome barely rising above its surrounding landscape. An unassuming entrance, flanked by concrete walls, leads visitors through a dark hallway, and into the light-filled sanctuary carved directly into the bedrock. The exposed rock walls earned it the alternative name “The Church of the Rock.” To contrast the heaviness of the materials, skylights surrounding the dome create a play of light and shadows and a feeling of airiness.

The church is the result of an architectural competition won by the architect brothers Timo and Tuomo Suomalainen in 1961. Their original solution was recognized not only for its creativity but also for the respect it showed to the competition’s goal: “to include the organization plan for the whole Temppeliaukio Square, taking into attention that as great part as possible of the rock outcrop of the square to be preserved.” The winning proposal achieves this by embedding the church inside the rock and placing parish facilities on the edges of the hillock. This article explores the story behind the Temppeliaukio Church both narratively and visually, through the lens of Aleksandra Kostadinovska, a professional photographer from Skopje.

A Modernist Church Set in Stone: The Story Behind the Temppeliaukio Kirkko in Helsinki, Finland - Image 1 of 4A Modernist Church Set in Stone: The Story Behind the Temppeliaukio Kirkko in Helsinki, Finland - Image 2 of 4A Modernist Church Set in Stone: The Story Behind the Temppeliaukio Kirkko in Helsinki, Finland - Image 3 of 4A Modernist Church Set in Stone: The Story Behind the Temppeliaukio Kirkko in Helsinki, Finland - Image 4 of 4A Modernist Church Set in Stone: The Story Behind the Temppeliaukio Kirkko in Helsinki, Finland - More Images+ 29

SPPARC Studio Unveils Design for Residential Conversion of Former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in London

SPPARC architecture and design studio has revealed plans to renovate the former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in Hammersmith, London, which has stood vacant for two decades. The building, originally named the Royal Masonic Hospital and designed by Thomas S. Tait, is regarded as one of the first major modern buildings in the UK and was Europe's largest independent acute hospital when it was opened by King George V in 1933. Built to provide low-cost treatment for Freemasons and their families, the 260-bed facility operated until 1994, reopened as an NHS hospital in 2002, and was permanently closed in 2004. According to the recent announcement, the Grade II listed landmark, currently on Historic England's Heritage at Risk register, is intended to be repurposed as 140 new homes, a 65-bed care home, and spaces available for public hire.

SPPARC Studio Unveils Design for Residential Conversion of Former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in London - Image 1 of 4SPPARC Studio Unveils Design for Residential Conversion of Former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in London - Image 2 of 4SPPARC Studio Unveils Design for Residential Conversion of Former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in London - Image 3 of 4SPPARC Studio Unveils Design for Residential Conversion of Former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in London - Image 4 of 4SPPARC Studio Unveils Design for Residential Conversion of Former Ravenscourt Park Hospital in London - More Images+ 2

From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion

Nestled amongst the plethora of grandiose and carefully crafted national pavilions in the Giardini della Biennale in the Italian city of Venice is one pavilion by the city's perhaps most well-known modern architect. Sited between the pavilions of Russia and Switzerland is the Venezuela Pavilion, by architect Carlo Scarpa. In many ways, the structure typifies the design approach of its architect but has its idiosyncrasies. Built for Europe's most important biennial art exhibition, it is a member of a cohort of Modernist pavilions that came after the earlier, more classicist pavilions. This is its story.

From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion - Image 1 of 4From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion - Image 2 of 4From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion - Image 3 of 4From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion - Image 4 of 4From Little Venice to Venice: The Narrative of Carlo Scarpa’s Venezuela Pavilion - More Images+ 20

The Nordic Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Explores Architecture Through the Lens of the Trans Body

The Nordic countries' display at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia is housed in Sverre Fehn's celebrated 1962 Nordic Pavilion, a landmark of architectural modernism representing Sweden, Norway, and Finland. This year, the Nordic countries present an exhibition that blends architecture, performance, and art installation, treating the built environment as a stage for the sociopolitical norms of fossil-based culture. Curated by Kaisa Karvinen for the Architecture & Design Museum Helsinki, the exhibition, titled Industry Muscle: Five Scores for Architecture, explores modern architecture through the lens of the trans body, featuring the work of Finnish artist Teo Ala-Ruona, who combines performance art, theatre, and choreography.

The Nordic Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Explores Architecture Through the Lens of the Trans Body - Image 1 of 4The Nordic Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Explores Architecture Through the Lens of the Trans Body - Image 2 of 4The Nordic Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Explores Architecture Through the Lens of the Trans Body - Image 3 of 4The Nordic Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Explores Architecture Through the Lens of the Trans Body - Image 4 of 4The Nordic Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Explores Architecture Through the Lens of the Trans Body - More Images+ 39

Eames House Reopens With Expanded Public Access Following Restoration

Following an extensive conservation process, the Eames House, Case Study House No. 8, has reopened to visitors after a five-month closure due to smoke damage from the Palisades Wildfire earlier this year. Although the iconic structure, designed by Charles and Ray Eames in 1949 as part of the Case Study House Program, was not directly damaged by flames, it required comprehensive cleaning and restoration to address the effects of smoke infiltration. As part of the reopening, the adjacent Eames Studio, previously closed to the public, will now be accessible for the first time. Designed and used by Charles and Ray as a working space, the studio will serve as a venue for rotating exhibitions, workshops, and public programs, offering an expanded architectural experience.

Eames House Reopens With Expanded Public Access Following Restoration - Image 1 of 4Eames House Reopens With Expanded Public Access Following Restoration - Image 2 of 4Eames House Reopens With Expanded Public Access Following Restoration - Image 3 of 4Eames House Reopens With Expanded Public Access Following Restoration - Image 4 of 4Eames House Reopens With Expanded Public Access Following Restoration - More Images+ 3

Inside the Construction of Niemeyer’s Cristo Rei Cathedral in Belo Horizonte, Seen Through Paul Clemence’s Lens

The Cristo Rei Cathedral is Oscar Niemeyer's design for the cathedral of Belo Horizonte, the capital of the state of Minas Gerais in southeastern Brazil. Conceived between 2005 and 2006, it is one of the late architect's final projects in the country. The design features a domed structure approximately 60 meters in diameter, suspended by two towering elements rising 100 meters high. Niemeyer referred to the project as a "square," consisting of a cathedral with a capacity for 3,000 people and an external altar designed to accommodate up to 20,000 worshippers for mass and public events. Construction began in 2013 and is still ongoing. Earlier this year, photographer Paul Clemence visited the site, documenting the building process and capturing the emergence of Niemeyer's signature curves.

Inside the Construction of Niemeyer’s Cristo Rei Cathedral in Belo Horizonte, Seen Through Paul Clemence’s Lens - Image 1 of 4Inside the Construction of Niemeyer’s Cristo Rei Cathedral in Belo Horizonte, Seen Through Paul Clemence’s Lens - Image 2 of 4Inside the Construction of Niemeyer’s Cristo Rei Cathedral in Belo Horizonte, Seen Through Paul Clemence’s Lens - Image 3 of 4Inside the Construction of Niemeyer’s Cristo Rei Cathedral in Belo Horizonte, Seen Through Paul Clemence’s Lens - Image 4 of 4Inside the Construction of Niemeyer’s Cristo Rei Cathedral in Belo Horizonte, Seen Through Paul Clemence’s Lens - More Images+ 23

Conserving Black Modernism: The Getty Foundation Adds Five U.S. Landmarks to its 2025 Grant Program

The Getty Foundation's Conserving Black Modernism initiative was launched in 2022 as a grant program to preserve and ensure the legacy of African American architects within the Modernist movement across the United States. In partnership with the National Trust for Historic Preservation's African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, it supports conservation efforts, training, and educational initiatives to address the historical oversight of significant architectural landmarks and their designers' contribution. For its third funding cycle in 2025, five new buildings will receive critical support, expanding the initiative's reach into new communities with the first projects in Chicago and the Pacific Northwest.

Conserving Black Modernism: The Getty Foundation Adds Five U.S. Landmarks to its 2025 Grant Program - Image 1 of 4Conserving Black Modernism: The Getty Foundation Adds Five U.S. Landmarks to its 2025 Grant Program - Image 2 of 4Conserving Black Modernism: The Getty Foundation Adds Five U.S. Landmarks to its 2025 Grant Program - Image 3 of 4Conserving Black Modernism: The Getty Foundation Adds Five U.S. Landmarks to its 2025 Grant Program - Image 4 of 4Conserving Black Modernism: The Getty Foundation Adds Five U.S. Landmarks to its 2025 Grant Program - More Images+ 29

Léon Krier, Influential Voice in New Urbanism, Passes Away at 79

Léon Krier, the Luxembourg-born architect and urban theorist renowned for his critical stance against modernist planning and his influential role in the New Urbanism movement, passed away on June 17, 2025, at the age of 79. Known for his uncompromising critique of modernist planning and his vision for human-scaled, walkable communities, Krier leaves behind a substantial body of built work, theoretical writing, and educational influence.

Over a career spanning several decades, Krier advocated for a return to classical architecture and human-scaled urbanism, positioning himself as a leading critic of sprawling suburban development and high-rise modernism. His advocacy for walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods and his insistence on the cultural and social value of architecture challenged the prevailing norms of late 20th-century urban planning.

Léon Krier, Influential Voice in New Urbanism, Passes Away at 79 - Image 1 of 4Léon Krier, Influential Voice in New Urbanism, Passes Away at 79 - Image 2 of 4Léon Krier, Influential Voice in New Urbanism, Passes Away at 79 - Image 3 of 4Léon Krier, Influential Voice in New Urbanism, Passes Away at 79 - Image 4 of 4Léon Krier, Influential Voice in New Urbanism, Passes Away at 79 - More Images+ 5

Between Geometric Shapes and Raw Materials: The Case of Brutalism in Italy

Born in the post-war period in the United Kingdom, the Brutalism movement was first met with skepticism but has found a new appreciation in the last decade, capturing the imagination of new designers fascinated with the interplay between striking geometric shapes and the exposed raw materials in which they are rendered. From Britain, the movement spread throughout Europe, Southeast Asia, and Africa, gathering different variations influenced by the cultural and socio-economic status of each area. In this article, we delve into the particularities that define Italy's contribution to the Brutalist movement, exploring the style through the lens of Roberto Conte and Stefano Perego. The two photographers have also published a photographic essay on the subject, taking the form of a book titled "Brutalist Italy: Concrete Architecture from the Alps to the Mediterranean Sea".

Between Geometric Shapes and Raw Materials: The Case of Brutalism in Italy - Image 1 of 4Between Geometric Shapes and Raw Materials: The Case of Brutalism in Italy - Image 2 of 4Between Geometric Shapes and Raw Materials: The Case of Brutalism in Italy - Image 3 of 4Between Geometric Shapes and Raw Materials: The Case of Brutalism in Italy - Image 4 of 4Between Geometric Shapes and Raw Materials: The Case of Brutalism in Italy - More Images+ 11