All Building Design articles in 4 March 2016
View all stories from this issue.
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Features
AYA shortlists: Young Architect of the Year
We finish our series celebrating BD’s Architect of the Year finalists, looking at the Young Architect of the Year shortlist
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News
Make revises £350m West End scheme to accommodate Facebook HQ
Planners set to approve changes despite concerns over loss of retail
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News
Mikhail Riches triumphs in Park Hill contest
London architect beats off competition from five rivals
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Features
AYA shortlists: Refurbishment Architect of the Year
We continue our series celebrating BD’s Architect of the Year finalists, looking at the refurbishment shortlist
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News
Door thrown open to rival architects as Jean Nouvel's £94m Geneva museum bites the dust
Fully funded project approved by planning authority is thrown out by 4% margin in public vote
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News
Rome Prize opens for entries
Three-month, all-expenses-paid residency for young architects and students
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Opinion
Lessons from competitive Paris
London’s next mayor would do well to look across the Channel, says Amanda Baillieu
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News
Google's third King's Cross building wins planning
Mossessian Architecture gets green light as BIG dodges ‘speculation’ over £650m AHMM job
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News
Buckley Gray Yeoman reveals office built on thin air
Office element of controversial Goodsyard scheme straddles rail line
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Features
AYA shortlists: Office Architect of the Year
We continue our series celebrating BD’s Architect of the Year finalists, looking at the office shortlist
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Features
Three prefabricated solutions to the housing crisis
A new range of low-cost prefabricated housing solutions is being rolled out across the country with the potential to help tackle Britain’s affordable housing crisis
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News
Manchester's Toast Rack to be converted into flats
Two architects submit plans for private rented sector project
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News
LSE unveils rival designs for £100m building
Shortlist includes Grafton, Amanda Levete and Diller Scofidio Renfro
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Opinion
What Brexit might mean for architects
It’s hard to separate the facts from the rhetoric, but on balance the profession will probably be best served by the UK remaining in the EU, says BD editor Thomas Lane