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Welcome to China! And to
a new world for Architectural
Record. Throughout
its 113-year history, this magazine has featured work
by American architects, and with increasing frequency,
informative, inspirational, or provocative work by architects
from around the world. With this issue, we literally
take a great leap forward, not only embracing an entire
nations work thematically, but also fundamentally
altering and enlarging our own briefas a publication
and as an institution.
You should be able to tell
the difference, power-packed and compressed as this
issue needs to be. Here you will find our overview of
architects and architecture in China, a dizzying attempt
for so large a topic. Included is a rich spread of information:
outlines of numerous new projects in planning that are
transforming eastern Asia; profiles of talented younger
designers, many of whom had been trained abroad and
have returned to home and family with hip new sensibilities
intact; and evidence of what it means for non-Chinese
architects who seek work in the China market, and the
price it demands.
In addition to magazine publishing,
McGraw-Hill Construction has embarked on a mission to
China as earnest as any diplomatic one. After numerous
Pacific crossings, collectively we are sponsoring a
conference there. Unlike most unilateral gatherings,
this colloquium will engage dual continents: Asia and
North America. For two days this spring, April 15 and
16, we will host a Global
Summit in Beijing, drawing two nations and their
shared visions and aspirations together. From China
will be leaders from national ministries, leading architectural
and engineering practitioners, and investorsall
gathered to discuss the implications of working where
the stakes are so high. Complementing the Chinese will
be leaders from North America who will share their own
experiences facing the chasm between vision and reality:
What obstacles lie in any professional firms path
to international success? There may be room for you
at the table as well.
Some people complain that
the architectural lingo seems too arcane or difficult.
Uniquely, in a first effort, Architectural
Record and our sister
publication, Engineering
News-Record, will be
translated into Mandarin Chinese for local audiences.
Thanks to a friendly relationship with our partnering
institution, Shanghais Tongji University, both
magazines suddenly broaden their reach: The Pacific
will not seem quite so wide after April. Our new digital
version of the magazine, made possible through Zinio
technology, already lightens the airfreight bill. Virtual
delivery weighs no more than bundles of light.
Too heavy on the China for
you? If you are practicing in Illinois or Vermont, you
may well ask, What does all of this China-talk
have to do with me? What goes on there remains
halfway around the globe, and how could it affect my
own practice? China is, and always will be, Not in My
Back Yard.
Yet are you aware that Chinas
growth includes a dynamic component close to home? While
we were compiling this issue, a delegation of Chinese
builders visiting New York City stated that they were
bidding on construction for improving a New York landmarkthe
Whitestone Bridge. Reciprocally, Perkins & Will,
one of this countrys leading architectural firms,
already maintains two offices in mainland China. In
other words, fellow architect, Wake Up! The international
revolution has already taken place; but rather than
political, it takes the form of economic, commercial,
and professional interchangea
fluid melding of ideas and cultures that already affects
us all.
Read, visit, attend. In this
issue, what might seem radical change merely mirrors
the facts.
Join Robert Ivy as he jots down
notes on his travels and the state of architecture today
in the Editor's Journal.
Check out our index
of past editorials.
If you wish to write to our
editor-in-chief you can email him rivy@mcgraw-hill.com.
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