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After buying it in 2012, artist Sue Webster spent five years renovating it into a home and studio. But did you know there was once a real-life Londoner known as the Mole Man? After he was evicted from the property in 2006, Mole House was left abandoned until 2012, when it was sold at auction. It was bought by British artist Sue Webster, who renovated the 2,700-square-foot house into a personal studio and award-winning home with architects Adjaye Associates. Here's the intriguing history of London's Mole Man and what became of his home.
Persons: William Lyttle, Sue Webster, Organizations: Service, Adjaye Associates Locations: British
Venice, Italy CNN —Until recently, the Venice Architecture Biennale — arguably the world’s largest architecture exhibition — has drawn crowds for its (mainly Western) star appeal. In a May 20 Facebook post titled “Venice Biennale Blues,” Zaha Hadid Architects’ principal, Patrik Schumacher, wrote that “the ‘Architecture’ Biennale is mislabeled and should stop laying claim to the title of architecture. The German pavilion, which is displaying construction waste produced by 2022’s Venice Art Biennale is a case in point. The German Pavilion at the 18th Architecture Biennale is displaying and repurposing constuction waste from the city's Art Biennale last year. The British Pavilion curators Meneesha Kellay, Joseph Henry, Jayden Ali and Sumitra Upham, with commissioner Sevra Davis, photographed in London.
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