CityLab Daily
Also today: Germans welcome portable air conditioning units, and how a Scottish wind farm project overcame NIMBY opposition.
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In the Hungarian capital of Budapest, Prime Minister Viktor Orban is rebuilding and remodeling the Buda Castle district in what the government says is an effort to restore the medieval area to its prewar appearance. However, critics argue the project, estimated to cost at least $590 million, is less about preservation and more of a land grab by the country’s nationalist leader. 

Architects point to rebuilt structures that look noticeably different from the original, while dilapidated historic buildings have remained neglected in other parts of the city. The controversial project is part of a broader global push to revive historic architecture, driven in part by a trend associating revivalist architecture with far-right values. Read more from architecture critic and contributor Robert Bevan today on CityLab: Budapest's Most Historic Site Gets a Controversial Rebuild

Arvelisse Bonilla Ramos

More on CityLab

Germans Are Finally Embracing Air Conditioning, Even Renters
Tenants face limited options in adapting to the new climate reality.

An Underrated Upside to YIMBY Ideas? Better-Looking Buildings
A debate about the future of the pro-housing movement should consider the role that zoning and building codes can play in improving the architecture of housing, and vice versa.

Scottish Wind Farms Show How to Counter Nimby Opposition
Projects on the Isle of Lewis were stalled for decades, but the perseverance of local leaders overcame regulatory obstacles and community concerns.

What we’re reading

  • Homes still aren’t designed for a body like mine (Atlantic)

  • Why mobile homes get hit hard by extreme weather and how to build better (Washington Post)

  • San Francisco is a car city now. Sorry (San Francisco Standard)

  • LA’s food culture, transformed by immigration raids (New Yorker)

  • The quintessential urban design of ‘Sesame Street’ (New York Times)

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