Venice Architecture Biennale — cool elegance and screaming problemsThe Biennale is a breeze to walk through — quiet, uncluttered, visually coherent — but what does it tell us?Caruso St John’s British pavilion: island nationsThe role of water in the fates of both Britain and Venice is cleverly reflected at the BiennaleArchitect Alison Brooks: ‘It’s not about the next tall building’As she prepares to unveil an installation at the Biennale, she discusses the importance of public space in her workVenice Biennale of Architecture: the future of public spaceIn an age of global chain stores, how can we reimagine the old town square?Do Ho Suh in Venice: the lives of othersWhen the V&A acquired several flats from a condemned block, the artist documented their interiors. The resulting film is now on show at the Pavilion of Applied ArtsHomo Faber: the master craftsman versus the machineA Venice exhibition celebrates the skilled work of artisansMore from this SeriesMeet the curators of the Venice Biennale of ArchitectureGrafton Architects goes beyond the physical in its use of free elements such as shade and lightRobin Hood Gardens travels to VeniceA fragment of the London housing project has been salvaged by the V&A museum — and will be on display at the Biennale
Venice Architecture Biennale — cool elegance and screaming problemsThe Biennale is a breeze to walk through — quiet, uncluttered, visually coherent — but what does it tell us?Caruso St John’s British pavilion: island nationsThe role of water in the fates of both Britain and Venice is cleverly reflected at the BiennaleArchitect Alison Brooks: ‘It’s not about the next tall building’As she prepares to unveil an installation at the Biennale, she discusses the importance of public space in her workVenice Biennale of Architecture: the future of public spaceIn an age of global chain stores, how can we reimagine the old town square?Do Ho Suh in Venice: the lives of othersWhen the V&A acquired several flats from a condemned block, the artist documented their interiors. The resulting film is now on show at the Pavilion of Applied ArtsHomo Faber: the master craftsman versus the machineA Venice exhibition celebrates the skilled work of artisansMore from this SeriesMeet the curators of the Venice Biennale of ArchitectureGrafton Architects goes beyond the physical in its use of free elements such as shade and lightRobin Hood Gardens travels to VeniceA fragment of the London housing project has been salvaged by the V&A museum — and will be on display at the Biennale