1. ArchDaily
  2. wHY

wHY: The Latest Architecture and News

Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY Create Metaverse Social Hubs Inspired by the Silk Road

The new metaverse platform pax.world, set to launch in early 2023, has announced its collaboration with global architecture offices Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY to create “Metaserai,” a vast social and cultural hub envisioned as the core of the new virtual community. The hubs are designed to host virtual cultural, social, and educational events such as concerts, theatre shows, digital art galleries, markets, lectures, parties, and festivals.

The pax.world platform aims to develop into a fully functioning society governed by a Decentralized Autonomous Organization, also known as a DAO. The virtual space will be divided into privately-owned plots of land punctuated by Metaserai communal hubs. These take inspiration from the Caravanserai of the ancient Silk Road, which became hubs for commerce and cultural exchange. Each of the architects is designing their own interpretation of Metaserai.

Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY Create Metaverse Social Hubs Inspired by the Silk Road - Image 1 of 4Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY Create Metaverse Social Hubs Inspired by the Silk Road - Image 2 of 4Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY Create Metaverse Social Hubs Inspired by the Silk Road - Image 3 of 4Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY Create Metaverse Social Hubs Inspired by the Silk Road - Image 4 of 4Grimshaw, HWKN, Farshid Moussavi, and WHY Create Metaverse Social Hubs Inspired by the Silk Road - More Images+ 8

wHY Granted Approval to Design the Tchaikovsky Academic Opera and Ballet Theater in Perm, Russia

The City Council of Perm, the planning commission, and members of the public gave their approval for a wHY-designed theater at the center of a major cultural revitalization initiative, led by the city’s mayor. The project will be a collaboration between wHY’s New York office and Buildings Workshop, and wHY’s Landscape Workshop, in order to generate a landmark for the emerging arts district.

New York City’s Proposal for the Missing Green-Link in Midtown

The city of New York is connecting all 32-miles of coastline with public amenities, piece by piece. To link the East River’s greenways, the interdisciplinary practice, wHY has submitted an RFP to the New York City Economic Development Corporation for the 1.1-mile long coastal stretch.

The landscape and urban design workshop as part of wHY -- wHY GROUNDS, has tackled the linear site, stretching from 53rd to 61st street, encompassing 1.72-acres of public space. The site is exceptional with its views to Roosevelt Island, the Queensborough Bridge, the Queens/Brooklyn waterfront and down to Lower Manhattan.

wHY Unveils $38 Million San Francisco Asian Art Museum Addition

San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum has unveiled plans for a $38 million renovation and addition project that will transform the institution’s exhibition and educational programs while reconnecting the building to its Civic Center location. Designed by architect Kulapat Yantrasast of wHY, the project consists of a new 13,000-square-foot exhibition Pavilion and Art Terrace clad in a rusticated gray terracotta facade that echoes the design language of the original beaux arts building.

wHY Unveils $38 Million San Francisco Asian Art Museum Addition - Image 1 of 4wHY Unveils $38 Million San Francisco Asian Art Museum Addition - Image 2 of 4wHY Unveils $38 Million San Francisco Asian Art Museum Addition - Image 3 of 4wHY Unveils $38 Million San Francisco Asian Art Museum Addition - Image 4 of 4wHY Unveils $38 Million San Francisco Asian Art Museum Addition - More Images+ 10

wHY-led Team Wins Competition for Edinburgh's Ross Pavilion

The team led by US-based architects wHY has been selected as the winner of the Ross Pavilion International Design Competition, beating out proposals from Adjaye Associates, BIG, Flanagan Lawrence, Page\Park Architects, Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter and William Matthews Associates + Sou Fujimoto Architects.

Featuring an international collaboration of architects, engineers and creative agencies – including Edinburgh-based design studio GRAS, Groves-Raines Architects, Arup, Studio Yann Kersalé, O Street, Stuco, Creative Concern, Noel Kingsbury, Atelier Ten and Lawrence Barth – the team envisioned a rolling terrain for the West Princes Street Gardens site that the jury lauded as both exciting and respectful of its historic setting.

wHY-led Team Wins Competition for Edinburgh's Ross Pavilion - Image 1 of 4wHY-led Team Wins Competition for Edinburgh's Ross Pavilion - Image 2 of 4wHY-led Team Wins Competition for Edinburgh's Ross Pavilion - Image 3 of 4wHY-led Team Wins Competition for Edinburgh's Ross Pavilion - Image 4 of 4wHY-led Team Wins Competition for Edinburgh's Ross Pavilion - More Images+ 2

BIG, Adjaye Among 7 Shortlisted for Ross Pavilion Design Competition

The Ross Development Trust, in collaboration with the City of Edinburgh Council and Malcolm Reading Consultants, has announced the seven finalists teams that will compete for the design of the new Ross Pavilion in the heart of Edinburgh, Scotland. Located in West Princes Street Gardens below Edinburgh Castle and at the intersection of the UNESCO World Heritage recognized Old and New Towns, the £25 million project will feature a landmark pavilion to replace an existing bandstand, a visitors center with cafe, and a subtle reimagination of the surrounding landscape. The new pavilion will host a range of cultural arts programming.

From an entry pool of 125 teams, the following seven were unanimously selected to continue on to the second stage of the competition:

BIG, Adjaye Among 7 Shortlisted for Ross Pavilion Design Competition - Image 1 of 4BIG, Adjaye Among 7 Shortlisted for Ross Pavilion Design Competition - Image 2 of 4BIG, Adjaye Among 7 Shortlisted for Ross Pavilion Design Competition - Featured ImageBIG, Adjaye Among 7 Shortlisted for Ross Pavilion Design Competition - Image 3 of 4BIG, Adjaye Among 7 Shortlisted for Ross Pavilion Design Competition - More Images