Blueprint magazine ends print edition after 37 years and 369 issues
Influential architecture and design magazine Blueprint has published its last print edition in its current bi-monthly format and is set to launch a "reimagined version" later this year. Blueprint magazine, which was launched in 1983 by Peter Murray and Deyan Sudjic, will not continue in its current printed format as the brand focuses on investing in The post Blueprint magazine ends print edition after 37 years and 369 issues appeared first on Dezeen.
Influential architecture and design magazine Blueprint has published its last print edition in its current bi-monthly format and is set to launch a "reimagined version" later this year.
Blueprint magazine, which was launched in 1983 by Peter Murray and Deyan Sudjic, will not continue in its current printed format as the brand focuses on investing in its digital offering.
"Issue 369 will be the final print version of Blueprint in its current format," said a statement from its publisher. "Fear not, a reimagined version will return later in the year."
Blueprint to become "content hub for architects and designers"
The highly influential publication, which has been a mainstay in the design and architecture world for almost 40 years, was initially launched with the backing of leading architects and designers including Richard Rogers and Terence Conran.
Blueprint was originally published monthly, before moving to a bi-monthly format in 2013. The publication, which is owned by NS Media Group, will now focus on becoming a "content hub for architects and designers".
"Since its launch in 1983, Blueprint's sole aim is to provide unrivalled coverage of the architecture, design and art worlds for professionals and enthusiasts alike," said the statement.
"We are excited to announce a new direction for Blueprint, as we invest in digital and aim to make it a central content hub for architects and designers around the world."
"I like to think we would have moved to a digital version ages ago"
Co-founder Murray described the move towards digital as "positive change", and said that he would have made the move to digital "ages ago" if he was still running the publication.
"We would only have been able to publish Blueprint in the 80s because the relatively new offset litho printing technology, and the demise of union control, widened access to the means of production," he told Dezeen.
"The new technology was the key: the medium was the message as Marshall McLuhan would say," continued Murray.
"In those early days, we were excited by change and I like to think we would have moved to a digital version ages ago if we'd still been running it," Murray added. "As Dezeen has proved so eloquently, design content and digital communications work brilliantly together."
However, Murray was concerned that the move towards digital may impact the quality of the publication.
"My key concern would be that too often publishers reduce editorial resources to such an extent when they go digital that the quality of the output suffers," he said.
"I do feel rather proud of the influence the magazine"
Following its launch in 1983, the publication was edited by Sudjic, who recently left his post as director of the Design Museum in London, until 1994. Former editors include Rowan Moore, who is now architecture critic at The Observer newspaper, plus Marcus Field and Vicky Richardson. The most recent editor was Johnny Tucker.
Murray said he was "rather proud of" the influence the magazine had on architecture and design discourse and on the careers of its contributors and editors.
"Looking back I do feel rather proud of the influence the magazine had, under the editorship of Deyan Sudjic and then Rowan Moore, on the discussion of architecture and design as well as of the number of magazines, writers, sites and programmes it spawned," he said.
"In the first Blueprint office at 26 Cramer Street in Marylebone we gathered around us a stellar group of creatives who went on to play even bigger roles in design and architecture," said Murray, listing David Chipperfield, Ken Armstrong, Sebastian Conran, Ricky Burdett and Tim Marlowe as well as Sudjic and Moore.
Burdett went on to set up the Architecture Foundation run the LSE Cities programme and direct the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2006. Sudjic later edited Domus, directed the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2002 and was director of the Design Museum from 2006 until early 2020.
Marlowe was director of exhibitions at the White Cube and then artistic director of the Royal Academy of Arts from 2014 until he took over from Sudjic as director of Design Museum earlier this year.
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