Episodes

  • Case Study House 8 (Eames House) - A House Shaped by Living
    Jan 13 2026

    Case Study House number eight, designed by Charles and Ray Eames, is often celebrated as an icon of modern architecture. But its true significance lies not in how it looks, but in how it was lived in.

    In this episode, we explore a house that treated architecture as a flexible framework rather than a finished statement. A place where work, family life, and creativity unfolded side by side, and where objects accumulated naturally over time.

    We look at how the Eameses approached design, why this house could only have emerged in postwar California, and how it challenged the idea that modern living needed to be controlled or perfected. More than a prototype, the Eames House became a demonstration of how architecture could support everyday life without dominating it.

    This episode continues our mini series on the Case Study Houses, moving from the program’s founding ideas to a lived example where life, not image, took the lead.

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    19 mins
  • The Case Study Houses - Inventing the Modern Home
    Jan 6 2026

    After the Second World War, the United States faced an urgent question. How to house a new generation, and what that new way of living should look like.

    In this episode, we explore the origins of the Case Study House program, an ambitious experiment launched in California to rethink the modern home. Architects, editors, manufacturers, and clients came together to treat the house not as a finished object, but as a prototype for everyday life.

    We look at why this experiment emerged when it did, why it took shape in Southern California, and what tensions it revealed between modern ideals and real domestic life.

    This episode lays the groundwork for a mini series about life, discipline, image, and legacy, and how the Case Study Houses changed the way we imagine home.

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    17 mins
  • The Sad Death of the Starchitect
    Dec 16 2025

    For decades, a handful of architects shaped cities, skylines, and the public imagination. They were ambitious, controversial, sometimes flawed, and often brilliant. We called them starchitects.

    Today, almost all of them are gone, or well into their seventies, eighties, and nineties. And strangely, no new generation has replaced them.

    In this episode, we look at the data behind the rise and disappearance of the starchitect, ask why no young global architectural figures are emerging, and explore how regulation, mega firms, public backlash, and fear of ambition have quietly reshaped the profession.

    This is not a nostalgic defense of flashy buildings or big egos. It is an argument about vision, authorship, and why architecture, and society as a whole, might be worse off without people willing to push boundaries, take risks, and occasionally fail in public.

    A critical, opinionated episode about ambition, innovation, and what we lose when architecture becomes safe, polite, and predictable.

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    15 mins
  • Unité d’Habitation Marseille - Le Corbusier’s Vision for a New Way of Living
    Nov 25 2025

    Explore the story behind the Unité d’Habitation in Marseille, Le Corbusier’s groundbreaking experiment in collective living.

    This episode looks at post war France, the housing crisis that shaped the commission, and the ideas that drove Le Corbusier to rethink how communities could live together.

    From the Modulor and the design of the duplex apartments to the challenges of construction, the first residents, and the building’s lasting influence, discover how this concrete giant became a milestone in modern architecture and a model for high density housing around the world.

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    18 mins
  • Burj Al Arab – The Building that Put Dubai on the World Map
    Nov 18 2025

    In this episode, we explore how the Burj Al Arab transformed Dubai from a coastal trading hub into a global destination.

    From Tom Wright’s first sketches to the construction of its artificial island. From its soaring atrium to the famous stunts on its helipad. This is the story of how architecture became branding, and how one hotel reshaped the identity of a city.

    A sail rising from the sea, a symbol of ambition, and the moment Dubai stepped onto the world stage.

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    12 mins
  • Flatiron Building - The Shape of a New York Icon
    Nov 11 2025

    At the turn of the 20th century, New York was still a low-rise city. The Empire State and Chrysler Buildings were decades away, and the idea of a skyscraper north of Madison Square seemed absurd.

    Then came the Flatiron, a 22-story steel-frame experiment that turned an awkward triangular lot into one of the most recognizable silhouettes in the world.

    In this episode, we explore how the Flatiron Building was born: the ambitions of the Fuller Company, Daniel Burnham’s bold design, the skepticism it faced, and how it became a symbol of modern New York.

    From its first tenants to its cultural impact and ongoing transformation, this is the story of how an odd-shaped corner became the face of a city.

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    17 mins
  • Berlin Wall - A Line That Shaped the World
    Nov 4 2025

    It wasn’t a palace, a museum, or a tower. It wasn't even a "place". It was just a wall.
    Yet for almost three decades, it held an entire city, and the world, hostage to fear, ideology, and division.

    In this episode, we explore the story of the Berlin Wall: how a city became trapped inside itself, how a simple structure evolved into one of the most sophisticated borders ever built, and how, in the end, it fell not to force, but to the will of ordinary people.

    A reflection on the power of architecture and the responsibility of those who shape it.

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    18 mins
  • California Academy of Sciences - The Story of a Living Building
    Oct 28 2025

    After the 1989 earthquake left the California Academy of Sciences in ruins, San Francisco faced a choice: rebuild what was lost, or imagine something entirely new.

    What emerged was one of the most sustainable museums ever created — a living, breathing building by Renzo Piano, where science and architecture merge beneath a rolling green roof.

    In this episode, we explore how an earthquake, a vision, and a radical architect turned disaster into rebirth, and created a museum that became part of the natural world itself.

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    12 mins