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MVRDV Tops Dubai’s Inaura Skyscraper with Giant Orb to Captivate

This blog post explains what happens when an article link cannot be retrieved by an AI or content tool. It provides step-by-step guidance for architects and engineers on how to share documents and core points so the content can be summarized and repurposed.

If you see a message like “I couldn’t retrieve the article text from that URL,” use the pointers below to diagnose the problem and supply the right materials for a clean summary.

Why retrieval failures happen and what this post covers

There are several common technical and access-related reasons an automated tool cannot fetch an article. These include paywalls, login requirements, blocked crawlers, geo-restrictions, broken links, or non-text formats like scanned PDFs and images.

This post offers a practical checklist to help you get the content into a usable form. It also shares best practices for sharing architecture and engineering documents so summaries are accurate and actionable.

Immediate troubleshooting steps to try first

Before re-sending content, run these quick checks:

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  • Open the URL in an incognito or private window to see if a login or cookie is required.
  • Verify the link is not behind a paywall. If it is, provide the article text or a PDF.
  • Check link correctness and make sure there are no redirects to login pages or expired links.
  • Confirm file type compatibility. Plain text, HTML, DOCX, and searchable PDF are ideal. Scanned images need OCR.
  • How to package the content for a precise summary

    When you paste content or upload files, include context that helps tailor the summary to your needs. Specify the audience, purpose, and desired length.

    For architecture and engineering topics, include details such as project type, technical level, and which figures or drawings are most relevant. This makes the summary more useful.

    Recommended content package for best results

    Send as much of the following as you can. Use clear file names and avoid putting important text in images without OCR.

  • Full article text pasted into the message if possible. This is the fastest way for an AI to process content.
  • Key points or objectives — list the 3–5 main takeaways you want emphasized.
  • Relevant figures, tables, or CAD references — attach searchable PDFs or provide direct download links.
  • Target audience — for example, clients, contractors, planning officials, or engineers. Also specify the preferred summary length.
  • Special considerations for architecture and engineering documents

    Technical documents often contain drawings, specifications, and tables that can be lost if not shared correctly. Use these tips to preserve meaning and technical accuracy.

    File and annotation best practices

    Always provide searchable formats and include captions or callouts for drawings. If a drawing needs interpretation, give the drawing number, scale, and a brief note on the important detail.

    Redact confidential data only if needed and state what was redacted.

  • Use searchable PDFs or DOCX instead of images. Apply OCR to scanned documents.
  • Include legends and units clearly to avoid misinterpretation.
  • Supply a brief summary yourself if there are important design decisions or disputed claims.
  • Sample message template to paste with your article

    To speed communication, copy and paste this template:

    “Article text attached. Key points to emphasize: [list]. Audience: [clients/engineers/public]. Desired summary length: [short/medium/detailed]. Important figures: [figure numbers].”

    This enables a faster, more accurate summary and helps avoid follow-up questions.

     
    Here is the source article for this story: MVRDV tops Dubai skyscraper with giant orb to “steal the attention of onlookers”

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