Pentagram

Pentagram

National Building Museum

A new visual identity for the museum dedicated to the world we design and build.

For more than four decades, the National Building Museum in Washington, DC, has stood at the intersection of architecture, design, engineering, urban planning, and public life.

The Museum's soaring Great Hall, with its massive Corinthian columns, is one of Washington, D.C.'s grandest civic spaces.

The wordmark reflects the geometry and scale of the Pension Building's historic façade and interior.

An elegant serif typeface echoes exterior architectural details and the capitals of the four enormous columns in the Great Hall.

The identity is grounded in a clear, distilled expression of purpose: the world we design & build.

The Museum inspires curiosity about how our world is designed and built through exhibitions, programs, education, and advocacy.

Thomas Woltz's talk on The Land is Full about Nelson Byrd Woltz's design process, followed by a conversation with Thaisa Way (Director of Garden & Landscape Studies at Dumbarton Oaks).

The National Building Museum celebrates work that has shaped the built environment through design excellence, innovation, and leadership.

Retrospective: London Design Festival

London Design Festival has been an annual celebration of the power of creativity for over 20 years. Since 2008, Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa has served as the LDF’s creative director, responsible every September for the design of a new visual identity. By inventively remixing a few key elements — typography, a signature red (“the colour of London”), and LDF's simple monogram — the program unifies hundreds of events while reaffirming London’s status as a global design capital.
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Retrospective: London Design Festival

London Design Festival has been an annual celebration of the power of creativity for over 20 years. Since 2008, Pentagram partner Domenic Lippa has served as the LDF’s creative director, responsible every September for the design of a new visual identity. By inventively remixing a few key elements — typography, a signature red (“the colour of London”), and LDF's simple monogram — the program unifies hundreds of events while reaffirming London’s status as a global design capital.