I recently took off on holiday to The States and left my camera gear at home cooling down after a blazing few months around New Zealand and offshore. My eyes and trigger finger couldn’t help themselves though, with the abundance of superb light, iconic architecture, art, spaces, compositions the iPhone camera was heading for data overload. So many classic moments from dinosaurs to the Dia that needed to be captured. Here’s a few of my favourites.

New Whitney Museum

New Whitney Museum, Meat packing district, NYC by Architect: Renzo Piano

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Raking late afternoon light across Radio City Music Hall, NYC by Architect: Edward Durell Stone (1932)

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Interior space at Noguchi Museum, Queens, NYC

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Tree line lines at the pointy end of Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Park,
Manhattan, NYC by Architect: Louis Kahn

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United Nations Headquarters photographed from Roosevelt Island, Manhattan, NYC by Architect: Le Corbusier

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Monumental steel with Richard Serra at Dia Beacon, New York

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The Mermaid I met first in 1995 at the Americas Cup in San Diego
(during my first professional assignment) by Roy Lichtenstein at Storm King, New York

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Muted top light falls gently onto the courtyard at the Frick Museum, NYC

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Boats, People, Lake, Summer, Central Park West, NYC

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Dem Bones, Natural History Museum, Central Park West, NYC

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Slice of light runs up the Flat Iron Building, NYC by Architects: D.H. Burnham & Co. (1902)

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Ground Floor Elevation at the Donald Judd, Spring Street Building, NYC

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Getty Centre with waterless water feature due to current Californian drought,
Los Angeles, California by Architect: Frank Gehry

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‘Jesus Saves’ or ‘Susej Sevas’ depending on your world view.
Shot from the comfort of the rooftop bar at the Ace Hotel, Downtown Los Angeles, California

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Blue sky meets garden green reflecting in the Walt Disney Concert Hall,
Downtown Los Angeles, California by Architect: Frank Gehry

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Last of the evening summer sun, Griffith Observatory,
Los Angeles, California by Architects: John C. Austin and Frederick M. Ashley (1932)

There’s a load of fresh, new photography galleries now online.

Whether you love your architecture served wild and coastal, with scientific precision, or a random place between those two destinations, there’s plenty to enjoy.