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Compare works, bureaus, or a mixed set

Read a small selection side by side through images, place context, climate, typology, materials, carbon signals, accessibility, and related books.

1 selected · 1 other item held elsewhere in the compare set

1 selected · 1 other item held elsewhere in the compare set

The selected works stay in sync by slot, while the pins map where they sit inside the mixed set.

BOK Tower in Tulsa, United States
BOK Tower

1976 · Tulsa, Tulsa, United States

BOK Tower image

Skyscraper in Tulsa, Oklahoma, US

Site spread

Pins are normalized from the recorded work coordinates so you can read the set spatially.

BOK Tower

Tulsa, Tulsa, United States · Exact work coordinates

OpenStreetMap
Field
BOK TowerBOK Tower

1976 · Tulsa, Tulsa, United States

Arnstein ArnebergArnstein Arneberg

1910-1961 · Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Typeworkbureau
Year / years19761910-1961
PlaceTulsa, Tulsa, United StatesOslo, Oslo, Norway
Place contextTulsa, Tulsa, United StatesRepresentative site: Dovre Municipality, Dovre Municipality, Norway
Climate9°C · 13.3h daylight · 6 km/h wind8°C · 15.3h daylight · 7 km/h wind · via Dovre Station
FocusArchitecture13 works in corpus
Architects
  • Minoru Yamasaki
  • Arnstein Arneberg
Linked context

Bureaus

  • Yamasaki & Associates

Notable works

  • Dovre Station
  • Bjerkvik Church
  • Viking Ship Museum (Oslo)
  • Oslo City Hall
Typologies
  • tower
  • building
  • church
  • sacred space
  • museum
  • education
  • campus building
  • house
  • civic building
Materials

Not recorded yet.

  • concrete
  • brick
  • stone
  • timber
Carbon signals

tower gives us a typology starting point even though the work does not have a recorded material palette yet.

No dominant drivers yet.

Concrete, Brick, and Stone look like the main embodied-carbon drivers in the current palette.

  • Concrete
  • Brick
  • Stone
Lower-carbon levers

No levers surfaced yet.

  • Look for lower-clinker mixes, reused structure, and scope reductions before fine-grained product swaps.
  • Review masonry extent, reuse opportunities, and alternate assemblies where the design language allows it.
  • Check source geography, fabrication intensity, and whether stone is structural, cladding, or finish-only.
  • Track sourcing, certification, and assembly logic rather than assuming timber is automatically low impact.
AccessibilityAccess not recorded11 of 11 recorded works are publicly accessible
Related books

No linked books yet.

No linked books yet.