All Building Design articles in 01 April 2010 – Page 3
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News
Architects speak at Winchester
Eric Parry and Peter Barber are among six leading architects taking part in a public lecture series in Winchester
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Features
The shooting stars who lost the Plot
Young Architect of the Year Award runners up Copenhagen-based Plot showed great promise, but the partnership didn’t last
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Opinion
To the letter
Regarding your story “Arb fines Nottingham architect £1,000” (News March 26), I am amazed that a project commissioned in 2006 should have been entered into without a proper architect’s appointment in place. Hindsight has nothing to do with it
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Opinion
New Labour’s sorry legacy
Looking at the state of the built environment after 13 years, it’s no surprise that Cabe and the HCA’s futures are in doubt
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Opinion
It’s not personal
In defence of Ruth Reed’s refusal to condemn low-paying practices (News March 19), she does agree with the thrust of what we have all said
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Building Study
Purcell Miller Tritton’s refurbishment of Leighton House
After a century of decline, artist Frederic Leighton’s London house has at last been restored to its exotic glory
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Opinion
Highs and lows
The Strata building by BFLS (News March 26) is surely the nastiest, most aggressive, vulgar building of the last 10 years in London
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Opinion
Heatherwick’s pavilion is neighbour from hell
Dandelion clockBoots’ patriotic heart is all aflutter over the ecstatic reception given to the British pavilion at Shanghai, with a steady stream of locals fence-hopping into the site in an effort to see Thomas Heatherwick’s giant dandelion up close.It’s not such good news for John Körmeling, designer of the Dutch ...
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Opinion
Institute fails to reflect interiors
I read Diana Yakeley’s comments (Letters March 26) with much interest and, I have to say, incredulity.
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Opinion
Are the HCA’s proposed design standards good for housing?
No, says Stewart Baseley, the cost of meeting them will slow the flow of much-needed new housing; while Richard Simmons argues that we need to know every penny is well spent
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Inspirations
Deborah Saunt and David Hills on the Gardens of Versailles
The founders of DSDHA revisit Versailles and reveal why it’s the gardens, not the chateau, that matter
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Review
Graphic Masterpieces of Yakov Georgievich Chernikhov: the Collection of Dmitry Chernikhov
A new three-volume set reveals how Chernikhov’s architectural fantasies helped him to rise above totalitarianism
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Opinion
Earning their licence to build
Never mind architects learning how developers work, developers should have to learn how architects work before they are allowed to build
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Opinion
Bankable names
Jean Nouvel’s design for this year’s Serpentine pavilion (News March 26) is only the most recent of the series of pavilions designed by established, older and bankable architects who clearly rarely have the time to pay proper attention to the project (I except the brilliant Sanaa)
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News
7N mixes old and new at riverside
7N Architects has received detailed planning consent for a new visitor centre in Blairgowrie, Scotland
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Review
Building a Library 5: Guide to Greece
Robert Harbison picks 50 books that should feature in any architectural library
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Features
Dot to dot results: March 26
Last week’s winner was Peter Spilman of Snitterfield in Warwickshire, who identified Norman Foster’s Willis Faber Dumas building in Ipswich.
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Review
Joseph Ettedgui 1938-2010
The founder of the Joseph fashion chain commissioned architects such as Norman Foster, David Chipperfield and Sanaa to design his shops
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Features
Dot to Dot: 1 April 2010
Connect the dots, name the building and send us the answer with your postal address by 10am on Wednesday April 7 for a chance to win a copy of London at Night by Jason Hawkes
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