Lottery winner Brad Duke says he's always been fascinated by the lottery, and even thought he won once before, when he was 18.
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Visitors wait in the lobby of Al-Jazeera America after the network's first broadcast on Aug. 20, 2013, in New York. The network will shut down in April.
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Alejandro Aravena, winner of this year's Pritzker Architecture Prize, "understands materials and construction, but also the importance of poetry and the power of architecture to communicate on many levels," the jury citation states. (Above) Aravena's 2005 Siamese Towers, which he designed for his alma mater, Universidad Católica de Chile.
Mathematics School, Universidad Católica de Chile, 1999: "We identified the corridor as a design opportunity â as the moment where you see other people before they disappear into the isolated retreat of the individual working unit," Aravena says.
Medical School, Universidad Católica de Chile, 2004: "We were asked to do all kinds of classrooms, from seminars to auditoriums, in a very dense context," says Aravena. "The only way out, was to go high."
Monterrey Housing, Monterrey, Mexico, 2010: "In the Mexican housing market, the cheapest solution that is offered is about $30,000. So the poor are not being reached," Aravena says. His Monterrey houses have an initial cost of $20,000, and additions can increase their value.
Writer's Cabin, Montricher, Switzerland, 2015: "This suspended cabin had to balance comfort and compactness," Aravena says, adding that "the length of the cabin [allows] the writers to transit through different situations: cooking, eating and sharing."
UC Innovation Center, San Joaquín Campus, Universidad Católica de Chile, 2014: "We proposed a rather opaque construction toward the outside, which is also efficient for the Santiago weather, and then have a very permeable architecture inside," Aravena says.
Another view from the inside of the UC Innovation Center. "A powerful structure from a distance, it is remarkably humane and inviting," the jury citation reads. "Through a reversal of convention, the building is an opaque concrete structure on the exterior and has a light filled glass atrium inside."
Seaside Promenade, Constitución, Chile 2014: "Developed in the context of the Post-Tsunami Sustainable Reconstruction Plan (PRES) ... the project consists of a series of coastal lookout points," Aravena explains. The lookouts "reinforce and highlight the natural heritage embodied by the huge rocks of this landscape."
Aravena says he was overwhelmed by emotion when he learned the news of the prize. "More than the weight of responsibility, our feeling is that of freedom," he says — now, he no longer has to prove anything to anybody.