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Over the last four years, British photographer Stefan Irvine has photographed Hong Kong’s disappearing “tong lau,” or old-style tenement buildings.
Two Coventry University graduates have returned to the city where their love first blossomed as they prepare to tie the knot.
The photographer Michael Wolf's study of Hong Kong, "The Architecture of Density," began with the SARS outbreak in 2002. As many people became sick and others left the city, it dawned on Wolf that ...
The pair have flown nearly 6,200 miles (10,000km) back to their university city and posed for engagement photographs, ahead ...
Join our architecture tour of Hong Kong brutalism The research, supported by Design Trust, a non-profit funding platform, and Leigh & Orange Architects, with roots in Hong Kong since 1874, has ...
Artist and photographer Michael Wolf captured scenes both chaotic and serene across Asia and Europe, and was known for his shots of a hyper-dense Hong Kong.
Framing buildings in disorienting fashion, he created images of Hong Kong’s density. He also recorded the minutiae of its everyday life. By Tiffany May HONG KONG — Michael Wolf, a photographer ...
It’s hard not to find delight in the curvilinear, mollusk-esque public swimming pool from Farrells, the London, Hong Kong, and Shanghai–based architecture firm founded by Terry Farrell.
A thesis investigating how buildings in southeast Asia withstand natural hazards is included in Dezeen's latest school show by the University of Hong Kong.
Over the last four years, British photographer Stefan Irvine has photographed Hong Kong’s disappearing “tong lau,” or old-style tenement buildings.
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