Suburbia-
The main goal of this design is to provide readers with a similar experience they'd derive from flipping through the pages of the physical magazine as well as closely matching the aesthetic of the article in print.
- it starts off with a landing page which leads to the first article.


- Navigation is done predominantly by utilizing two buttons [previous/ next]. This provides users with a linear progressive experience as they read through articles.
- Most articles are presented in split-screen view, the left contains text / the right houses images. This was done to provide equal priority for both content types. 
-The 'great' articles are presented as overlay layers in between articles.
- While scrolling through articles [vertically], the image stays in a fixed position.
-Articles with multiple images are displayed as a navigable image gallery, saving screen real estate.
- Illustrated maps are interactive: clickable components show readers details of specific locations.
- Hamburger menu utilized. This allows for better organization of menu items and  prevents visual distractions while readers browse through the article.
- The Menu presents a different navigation option enabling readers filter content by location or activity. It also displays a table of content for users to jump to desired articles.
DEMO VIDEO BELOW-
suburbia
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suburbia

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