Founding Archigram members Peter Cook and Dennis Crompton will create a digital installation exploring the future of cities at the Design Trust's 2019 gala in Hong Kong. The installation will draw ...
A dozen years ago, in the early stages of a dissertation, I found myself in the special collections room at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles. To my left, a tweedy professor type softly sang ...
The hugely influential collective Archigram mixed 60s space race ideas with British provincial humour to visualise ‘pulsating’ mobile cities of the future. Fifty years on, three surviving members ...
Archigram ruled the architectural avant-garde in the late 1960s – 50 years on, its playful vision of a technocratic future is freely available online. Steve Parnell reports Almost half a century on ...
The archives of English architecture collective Archigram are headed to Hong Kong. After Archigram sold its archives to the not-quite-open-yet visual culture museum M+ for $2.37 million in March of ...
A giant city crawls across the land like an insect. Airships drop cultural attractions onto unsuspecting villages. A hovercraft expands into an inflatable settlement. These visions, sparked by sci-fi ...
From garments that convert into houses to cities that walk, Archigram, a group of radical British designers in the 1960s and 70s, threw out the rulebook about how we imagine architecture and the city.
Archigram is about to unveil a huge free archive featuring masses of material by the legendary 1960s architecture group A new website that will offer unrestricted access to 10,000 Archigram images ...
British architect Dennis Crompton, best known as one of the founders of the experimental collective Archigram, has died at the age of 89. His collaborator Peter Cook announced the news of his death on ...
The M+ Museum in Hong Kong, designed by Herzog & de Meuron, has purchased the entire archive of the prominent Archigram group. As reported by the Architect’s Journal, the collection was sold for £1.8 ...
Nowadays business deals have architects. Government policies have architects. There are even architects of sports victories. But architecture hasn't always permeated social consciousness, nor language ...
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