News

At the 9/11 Memorial and Museum Preview Site, see a sculpture made of iron from the World Trade Center that reunites the Twin Towers with the NYC skyline.
New York City’s forgotten beach oasis Today, if you stroll along the waters near Battery Park, in the vicinity of where the Twin Towers once stood, it’s nearly impossible to imagine that a ...
Standing proudly since 1973, the Twin Towers were global symbols of trade and capitalism. On September 11, 2001, they fell in an unprecedented terrorist attack, reshaping global perceptions of ...
A rare Michigan home designed by Minoru Yamasaki, the visionary architect behind New York City’s original World Trade Center, can now be yours.
The towers would not only overtake Brookfield Place and The Bow as Calgary’s tallest skyscrapers, but would be two of the ...
From the city sidewalks, it is easy to forget about the thousands of water towers perched overhead. These little hat-like embellishments are a staple of the New York City skyline; we can spot more ...
The New York Times found one great slice in the Twin Cities. We’re here to say there’s more. Sure, we’ll take the dangling pizza bait. Here are 9 restaurants beloved for their East Coast style.
Skyscrapers are on the rise in and around downtown Fort Lauderdale, with six large towers already under construction, nine approved but awaiting groundbreaking, and four awaiting approval.
El Paso-based Hunt Companies has secured the zoning it needs to build three high-rises across the river from downtown Austin. Read more about the skyline-changing plans in this report, which ...
Penzance Unveils Plans for “One Rosslyn” – A New Development Featuring Three Luxury Residential Towers Set to Reshape Rosslyn’s Skyline Proposed mixed-use complex will front Gateway Park ...
David Childs, the lead architect of the One World Trade Center skyscraper that rose from the site where the Twin Towers collapsed in New York City during the 9/11 attacks, has died. He was 83.
Skyline Developers, owned by the Wilf family, has filed plans for a 34-story, 66-unit residential building at 185 East 80th Street on the Upper East Side.