New York conference celebrates depth and diversity in architecture practice today
The World Around, Beatrice Galilee's day-long conference in New York, brought together future projects, inter-discplinary discussion and issues around gender bias, through an exciting array of international participants

In her five years as architecture curator at New York’s Metropolitan Museum Art, Beatrice Galilee’s most outstanding accomplishment was the creation of a banner annual design conference, ‘A Year of Architecture in a Day'. Now flying solo, she’s rebooted the event – now retitled ‘The World Around’ – and expanded on its scope: as the curator explains, ‘With The World Around, I tried to share more insight into the type of thinking and ideas that could change what happens next.'
Debuting on a rainy Saturday in late January, the first installment of the new symposium didn’t necessarily give a sense of where precisely the design industry is headed, though it certainly demonstrated the sheer depth and diversity of practice today.
Following much the same format as its predecessor, albeit in a different locale – the TimesCenter, inside the Manhattan headquarters of the New York Times – the eight-hour talk series drew some twenty-odd participants from as far afield as Ghana, Italy and Bahrain. Some of the projects presented were familiar fare; architect Junya Ishigami, for example, spoke about his widely-published Art Biotop Water Garden, a beguiling landscape project in rural Japan that blurs the line between the organic and artificial.
Writer and activist Carolina Criado Perez discussed gender bias in design
Other presenters came from well outside the disciplinary fold, in particular video game designer David O’Reilly, whose recent creation Everything (‘either a video game or art,' as its O’Reilly termed it) is an interactive experience that allows users to experience the world through the perspective of a snail, a star, or anything in between.
RELATED STORY
Other highlights included experimental designer Michael Wang on his 2019 exhibition Extinct in New York, featuring plants once native to the metropolis but long destroyed by urbanization, carefully collected and cultivated by the architect. Perennial favorite Bruce Mau took the stage to share highlights from his upcoming book Twenty-Four Design Principles, advancing provocative imperatives for would-be designers like ‘Begin with fact-based optimism' and ‘Design the invisible'.
And in perhaps the afternoon’s most entertaining turn, writer and activist Carolina Criado Perez delivered a tutorial on the gender bias hidden in almost every aspect of design – as for example in automobiles, where she pointed out that only lately have European manufacturers begun to use ‘short male crash-test dummies' to test for safety on women passengers (‘never women drivers,' she added). Fast and funny, Perez’s talk helped lighten what was otherwise a decidedly weighty, if always engaging intellectual round robin.
Junya Ishigami talked about one of his most recent completions, the Art Biotop Water Garden, in rural Japan, pictured here
David O'Reilly discussed his interactive ‘experience', Everything
OMA's Shohei Shigematsu talked about the firm's plans for the New Museum
INFORMATION
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
-
Classic New York restaurants for delicious food and inspired design
From Michelin-starred fine dining to reimagined retro diners, these are the most emblematic (and easy-on-the-eye) places to eat in the Big Apple
-
Ten super-cool posters for the Winter Olympics and Paralympics have just been unveiled
The Olympic committees asked ten young artists for their creative take on the 2026 Milano Cortina Games
-
A local architect’s guide to Accra
Alice Asafu-Adjaye, founder of architecture studio Mustard, describes the Ghanaian capital as spicy, colourful and loud. Here’s how to tap into its contagious energy
-
A New Zealand house on a rugged beach exemplifies architect Tom Kundig's approach in rich, yet understated luxury
This coastal home, featured in 'Tom Kundig: Complete Houses', a new book launch in the autumn by Monacelli Press, is a perfect example of its author's approach to understated luxury. We spoke to Tom Kundig, the architect behind it
-
Tour architect Paul Schweikher’s house, a Chicago midcentury masterpiece
Now hidden in the Chicago suburbs, architect Paul Schweikher's former home and studio is an understated midcentury masterpiece; we explore it, revisiting a story from the Wallpaper* archives, first published in April 2009
-
The world of Bart Prince, where architecture is born from the inside out
For the Albuquerque architect Bart Prince, function trumps form, and all building starts from the inside out; we revisit a profile from the Wallpaper* archive, first published in April 2009
-
Is embracing nature the key to a more fire-resilient Los Angeles? These landscape architects think so
For some, an executive order issued by California governor Gavin Newsom does little to address the complexities of living within an urban-wildland interface
-
Hop on this Fire Island Pines tour, marking Pride Month and the start of the summer
A Fire Island Pines tour through the work of architecture studio BOND is hosted by The American Institute of Architects New York in celebration of Pride Month; join the fun
-
A Laurel Canyon house shows off its midcentury architecture bones
We step inside a refreshed modernist Laurel Canyon house, the family home of Annie Ritz and Daniel Rabin of And And And Studio
-
A refreshed Rockefeller Wing reopens with a bang at The Met in New York
The Met's Michael C Rockefeller Wing gets a refresh by Kulapat Yantrasast's WHY Architecture, bringing light, air and impact to the galleries devoted to arts from Africa, Oceania and the Ancient Americas
-
A Fire Island house for two sisters reimagines the beach home typology
Coughlin Scheel Architects’ Fire Island house is an exploration of an extended family retreat for the 21st century