In the first of a series of video interviews with former members of Archigram for VDF, architect Peter Cook recounts how the influential avant-garde architecture group rose to prominence in the 1960s.
It’s been more than 60 years since Archigram hit the press, but the magazine founded by Warren Chalk, Peter Cook, Dennis Crompton, Ron Herron, David Greene, and Michael Webb still hasn’t lost its ...
After a 50-year break, Archigram – the infamous group of pioneering architectural theorists – has reformed and published a new issue of its eponymous publication. The group, which describes itself as ...
New York-based Distributed Art Publishers and Designers & Books have partnered with Archigram magazine and designer Miko ...
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.
The category of unbuilt and fantastical design ideas known as “paper architecture” may have no better exemplar than the radical British architecture group Archigram. Founded in the early 1960s, its ...
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 soon-to-open M+ museum in Hong Kong has bought the entire archive of influential British architecture collective Archigram, despite attempts to block the overseas sale. Tens of thousands of ...
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 ...
Until recently, the origins of the tiny-house movement were of little interest to the scientific community; however, if we take a look at the history of architecture and its connection to the ...