Architecture
in sentence
867 examples of Architecture in a sentence
One of the challenges with
architecture
has always been when we build up, we don't think about taking down.
That's a challenge, because it ends up that about a third of all landfill waste in the US is
architecture.
Here's a good example from
architecture.
We use modular
architecture
to lower the ecological impact.
Because for me, my Chicago isn't the nice
architecture
downtown, it's not the North Side.
The
architecture
and the furniture and everything come to life, but nothing more important than those stairs.
I trained in classical ballet and have a background in
architecture
and fashion.
And it's taught us really one thing, and that is to truly make good public space, you have to erase the distinctions between architecture, urbanism, landscape, media design and so on.
Things like the buildings, the vehicles, the architecture, civilizations were all designed by the player up to this point.
And it is perhaps the best example we have in Los Angeles of ancient extraterrestrial
architecture.
The site is located in the Faiyum of Egypt, and the site is really important, because in the Middle Kingdom there was this great renaissance for ancient Egyptian art,
architecture
and religion.
And this Ideagora that he created, an open market, agora, for uniquely qualified minds, was part of a change, a profound change in the deep structure and
architecture
of our organizations, and how we sort of orchestrate capability to innovate, to create goods and services, to engage with the rest of the world, in terms of government, how we create public value.
So, I decided over the years, because of a series of experiments that this is because of context and
architecture.
I said, if it's true that
architecture
is dominant,
architecture
restored to a cancer cell should make the cancer cell think it's normal.
And I'm going to take you through the
architecture
of the machine — that's why it's computer
architecture
— and tell you about this machine, which is a computer.
So let's bring this process to
architecture.
And unlike traditional architecture, it's a single process that creates both the overall form and the microscopic surface detail.
We've got mental architecture, we're sharing it, therefore solving a problem.
The first one, body-to-body transfer, yeah, with an outside mental
architecture
that I work with that they hold memory with for me.
Just moving on, is it possible, taking that idea of mind, body, body-building, to supplant the first body, the biological body, with the second, the body of
architecture
and the built environment.
Taking that idiom of, as it were, the darkness of the body transferred to architecture, can you use architectural space not for living but as a metaphor, and use its systolic, diastolic smaller and larger spaces to provide a kind of firsthand somatic narrative for a journey through space, light and darkness?
The city has some of the most beautiful
architecture
in the world, but it also has one of the highest amounts of abandoned properties in America.
My friend Richard Mazuch, an architect in London, coined the phrase "invisible architecture."
Salman was the consummate perfectionist, and every one of his stores was a jewel of Bauhaus
architecture.
For example, Yu Fangmin, from Guangzhou, has used FPGA technology to build our computer and show others how to do the same using a video clip, and Ben Craddock developed a very nice computer game that unfolds inside our CPU architecture, which is quite a complex 3D maze that Ben developed using the Minecraft 3D simulator engine.
I've always written primarily about architecture, about buildings, and writing about
architecture
is based on certain assumptions.
My kind of eureka moment came a few years later, when I was studying the art of the courts of Northern Europe, and of course it was very much discussed in terms of the paintings and the sculptures and the
architecture
of the day.
And in 2007, we created CISA3 as a research center for cultural heritage, specifically art,
architecture
and archaeology.
If we look at biology, and many of you probably don't know, I was a biology major before I went into architecture, the human skin is the organ that naturally regulates the temperature in the body, and it's a fantastic thing.
First of all, I guess we call it smart because it requires no controls and it requires no energy, and that's a very big deal for
architecture.
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