News

In travel news this week: the world’s smallest park, Spain’s greatest food, plus North Americans who started new lives in ...
The most famous example is surely the Eiffel Tower, built for the 1889 Paris Expo. Spain also boasts notable examples, such as the German pavilion at the 1929 Barcelona World’s Fair. Designed by Mies ...
Spain has long since been one of the most popular holiday destinations for Brits. In fact, British tourists made up the biggest proportion of the record-breaking 94 million tourists Spain welcomed ...
Photograph: Courtesy of Brooklyn Bridge Park Coinciding with the park’s 15th anniversary, the new pavilion and entryway at Pier 1 commemorate the park’s continued expansion and transformation.
As Expo 2025 is opening in Osaka, we have selected the pavilions built for Universal Expositions that have been fundamental ...
The Elphinstone Bridge will be closed for two years starting April 10 for demolition and reconstruction. Traffic police have announced diversions and restrictions for motorists. West-bound traffic ...
Police blocked off the area shortly after 6 a.m. while officials responded. There was heavy smoke. As of 7 a.m., the bridge has been reopened.
This is the astonishing moment a driver plunged 40ft off an unfinished bridge after getting confused by Google Maps, before making a miraculous landing. Rudie Heru Komandono, 61, had set up his ...
park goers have relished in Brooklyn Bridge Park’s open spaces, but have had to walk long distances to relieve themselves. A new pavilion by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects (TWBTA ...
This latest iteration also recalls Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown’s unbuilt proposal for the US Pavilion at Expo ’92 in Seville, Spain, in which a giant American flag comprises the ...
president of Brooklyn Bridge Park, said. “With the opening of the new Pier 1 Pavilion and Entryway, we have created a vibrant destination in the Park, where visitors can meet, gather ...
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s trip to see President Xi Jinping will offer a chance to swap notes on a common problem: how to respond to an increasingly unreliable United States.