All Building Design articles in 18 May 2012
View all stories from this issue.
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News
Assemble creates temporary cinema on Olympic fringe
Legacy Corporation funds architects and artists to create Sugarhouse Studios
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News
Nightingale Architects wins £5 million community hospital
Bicester Community Hospital is the UK’s second new-build community hospital in 40 years
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News
Pollard Thomas Edwards Architects chosen for £196m Havelock estate regeneration
Practice will work with Catalyst Housing for Ealing council
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News
Broadway Malyan to design Chinese HQ
Architect also hired to design museum, resort and research centre
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Features
Former ODA design adviser finds the joy of elegant solutions
Kay Hughes is no stranger to challenging client roles
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News
Capita Symonds submit plans for Burnley University Technical College
£9.3m facility to teach engineering and construction
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News
Swanke Hayden Connell Architects complete central London schools
Work in Islington took place while academy was open
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Opinion
Foundations live in the memory
David Rogers (News May 11) has misunderstood Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei’s plans for this year’s Serpentine pavilion.
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Opinion
Single-minded on double-aspect
Thank you for a lovely review of an attractive building (Buildings May 11).
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Opinion
Boris, get tough on development
A key task for Boris Johnson’s second term must surely be to get a grip on the hateful tide of ugliness steadily creeping across his great city.
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Opinion
Waterloo space is being eroded
Owen Hatherley (Opinion May 4) does not mention the huge curving structure filling in the upper levels of the eastern side of Waterloo station, currently causing great inconvenience to passengers.
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Opinion
Refurbish Elliott, don't demolish it
While I agree entirely with Kate Macintosh in her description of buildings as a public embodiment of collective memory (Letters May 11), her “musings” have a wistful, elegiac tone of resignation which, at least in the case of Elliott School, I hope is premature.
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News
AA losses over ‘tainted leases’ balloon to £5.5m
Court papers reveal details of likely liabilities
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News
US client puts RMJM on five-year work ban
New York schools authority bars troubled architecture practice following evaluation
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Opinion
No wonder RIBA’s election was a one-horse race
Harry Rich’s Radio 4 clutter conversation may explain architects’ reluctance to stand for president
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Opinion
It’s time for a new Serpentine design brief
Why the architecture competition has run its course
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Opinion
Schools may learn design the hard way
Money-saving briefing packs may demand too much from buildings and architects
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Opinion
Is Herzog & de Meuron’s Serpentine pavilion a con?
Yes, says Robert Adam, it shows conceptual architecture should not involve buildings; but John McAslan says it embodies the essence of good design