The Art of Architecture Season 3
An exploration of some of the world's most famous structures and the inspirations of the architects behind them.
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The Art of Architecture
2019An exploration of some of the world's most famous structures and the inspirations of the architects behind them.
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With 30 Day Free Trial!
The Art of Architecture Season 3 Full Episode Guide
Overlooking the Aegean Sea, the Dolunay Villa began as a sketch but transformed into something truly spectacular. Series finale.
The man responsible for the restoration of Neue Nationgalerie - Sir David Chipperfield - refuses acclaim for the work
McLaughlin's work is characterised by detail, and his latest piece is a library for Magdalene College Cambridge
Sumayya Vally is the youngest architect to have been invited to design and build the Serpentine Pavilion
Kjetil Thorsen, Wild Reindeer Pavilion, Norway: An architect with a global presence, the Norwegian's refined approach is displayed on the mountain of Snohetta.
A look at the work of Brian Mackay Lyons, a winner of Canada's Gold Medal for Architecture who is famed for his buildings situated across Nova Scotia.
A look at the work of Cirencester-based Yiangou Architects and it director Ross Sharpe Ross, who have built a reputation for designing new country houses in the Jacobean style, while incorporating influences from a number of periods and styles.
Seeing the potential of the High Line in New York, Liz Diller extravagantly designed The Shed - a truly unique structure, on wheels.
A look at Daniel Libeskind's National Holocaust Memorial of Names in Amsterdam, which commemorates Dutch people who were killed in Nazi concentration camps.
Series three begins with Norman Foster - a leading figure in British architecture, famous for The Gerkhin and London's Millennium Bridge.