amanda kolson hurley

Journalist and author

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  • Reimagining Suburbia

    Reimagining Suburbia

    What if the world’s greatest architects began looking beyond the city limits? The American Scholar, Autumn 2015 Renzo Piano may be the most urban, and urbane, of great architects working today. He made his name in Paris in the 1970s, when he and Richard Rogers designed the Pompidou Center, a machine of a museum bristling…

    Amanda Kolson Hurley

    October 1, 2015
    Uncategorized
    architecture, housing, real-estate development, suburbia, urban design
  • Young-Old: Deane Simpson Q&A

    Young-Old: Deane Simpson Q&A

    Simpson discusses his new book on the evolution and sociology of retirement communities. Architect, September 2015 In his new book, Deane Simpson, an architect who teaches at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, chronicles the rise of communities built for older people—not the infirm elderly, but the active or “young-old.” Demographic and…

    Amanda Kolson Hurley

    September 23, 2015
    Uncategorized
    housing, real-estate development, urban design
  • Hearing Loss in the City

    Hearing Loss in the City

    What It’s Like to Be Hearing Impaired* in a Big, Dense City An artist tackles the challenges of navigating dense urban areas with hearing loss. CityLab, Sept. 18, 2015 The multimedia artist Trish Adams began losing her hearing in her mid-twenties. She now wears high-end hearing aids in both ears and continues to communicate through…

    Amanda Kolson Hurley

    September 18, 2015
    Uncategorized
    cities, urban design
  • Whistler and Peacock Blue

    Whistler and Peacock Blue

    Saturated Space, September 2015 In the summer and autumn of 1876, visitors to the London home of shipping magnate Frederick Richards Leyland, at 49 Prince’s Gate in Kensington, stopped short when they came to the dining room. There they were met by the sight of a dandyish man, with a shock of white hair, painting on…

    Amanda Kolson Hurley

    September 15, 2015
    Uncategorized
    architectural history, art, color, design, Whistler
  • Del Webb 2.0

    Del Webb 2.0

    The Subtle Shifts in Retirement Community Designs Del Webb, the country’s biggest builder of “active adult” housing, is changing its formula to appeal to Baby Boomers. CityLab, Sept. 8, 2015 On January 1, 1960, the Del E. Webb Corporation invited members of the public to see its new community, Sun City, Arizona. Sun City was…

    Amanda Kolson Hurley

    September 8, 2015
    Uncategorized
    real-estate development, suburbia, urban design, work-life
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