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World’s Seventh Tallest Building Comes to Life with BIM
We look at one of the world’s newest and tallest skyscrapers, recently revealed by SOM, Ronald Lu & Partners and ECADI.We look at one of the world’s newest and tallest skyscrapers, recently revealed by SOM, Ronald Lu & Partners and ECADI. With a height of...
Got a Bad Habit? Here’s How to Train Your Brain to Beat It
Chances are, a few of your bad habits have become particularly evident during the pandemic. Or maybe you’ve picked up a new bad habit altogether. You may notice aspects of the way you keep your home that make it hard to work there effectively. Your personal habits may...
How to Make Rational Decisions in the Face of Uncertainty
As we’re battling a virus that scientists still don’t fully understand, watching the stock market sink, then soar, then sink again, and facing a contentious election, the future seems completely unpredictable (instead of merely as unpredictable as it has always been)....
How to Listen for Small Signals that Lead to Big Impact
While popular culture presents leaders as confident, maybe sometimes arrogant, we are not immune to self-doubt. To wondering whether or not our particular approach or words land from moment to moment. In the world of virtual everything, where many of our senses are...
Who Speaks Truth to Your Power
When you are the president of the United States, the stakes are always high, because you’re making monumental decisions that affect the lives of 328 million people. Being guided by correct information, proper advice and transparency is incredibly important for a...
How 3D printing could Change the Way our Homes are Built
The way the buildings we live and work in are created is changing.Over the last few years 3D printing has generated a lot of interest when it comes to the built environment. From computer-generated modeling, to the use of electric vehicles on construction sites, the...
The Shenzhen Effect: Why China’s Original ‘Model’ City Matters More than ever
By 2035, China's government expects over 70% of the country's population -- around a billion people -- to be living in cities. Both Shanghai and Beijing have announced population limits and are implementing policies to reduce the number of new arrivals. These...
The Japanese Architects Who Treated Buildings Like Living Organisms
In 1952, Japan faced newfound autonomy. The Americanoccupation following World War II ended, and as the decade progressed, the devastating effects of the atomic bomb -- both physical and psychological -- began to recede into the country's past.rebuilding. As they...
The Shenzhen Effect: Why China’s Original ‘Model’ City Matters More than ever
By 2035, China's government expects over 70% of the country's population -- around a billion people -- to be living in cities. Both Shanghai and Beijing have announced population limits and are implementing policies to reduce the number of new arrivals. These...








