An american journal of the built and natural environments. Has an emphasis on poetry and fiction
The magazine of the RIBA. Links to their site are strictly prohibited so , once again, and we don’t have Google’s lawyers so you’ll have to look for the link at the main RIBA website .
One of the best design link blogs on this planet. Nuff said.
Great site and newsletter, but this lot too have a problem with people linking to them. So we won’t. You could try typing in metropolismag.com though.
Read back issues of this Brit magazine on their well thought out website. Hmmm.. I notice that they have a dingbat policy of not permitting links to them, so I will honour it by removing this one and the RSS link. Just type iconeye.com into your browser (that’s not a link is it?).
Hong Kong magazine, cover articles available as PDFs.
MIT’s architecture journal. Articles are only available if you pay or have access via a university :(
Good meaty articles – most from each issue are available on site. PDFs also available.
This Japanese series of magazines has no on site content other than the ability to look at covers and purchase the mags.
Magazine focussed on interior architecture but with plenty of the exterior too. The daily design dose is worth keeping an eye on. You can also upload your own work to this site.
Grand Daddy of Archi competition sites, the relaunched Death by Architecture is looking pretty strong. Up to date with listings from around the planet.
A regular stream of architectural monographs – with photos of most projects online.
American site into things modern and young. Not much print content but they do have podcasts, videos and a blog to make up for it.
A famous german publication that is known for taking a really close up look at things. You can leaf through current issues.
The web presence of this italian magazine requires login to do anything at all. English / Italian spoken.
Architectural news and goings on in Canada.
Links to this useful and newsy British website are prohibited but I’m sure you can find it using one of those search engines that doesn’t mind about such bans.
This is proudly Web 1.0. Using hypertext to create a massive matrix of architectural tidbits in text, you can drift around in a state of confusion/curiosity. Contains knowledge of Australian architecture – John Andrews in particular.