All Building Design articles in 09 September 2011 – Page 2
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News
Embassy architects axed from Foreign Office work
Tick-box procurement blamed for award-winning practices failing to make new framework
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News
Page Park files Glasgow theatre scheme
Designs for the redevelopment of Glasgow’s grade A listed Theatre Royal have been submitted for planning approval by Page Park Architects.
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News
US-style housing trust scheme set for Mile End
Maccreanor Lavington plans UK’s first permanently affordable homes
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News
Edward Cullinan creates green film store for BFI
Edward Cullinan Architects has completed a film storage centre in Warwickshire for the British Film Institute.
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Opinion
Policy is only half the story
The government ignores the need for investment and training in its eagerness to strip the red tape from the planning system
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News
Goldschmied takes role on Sparch board
Ex-RIBA president Marco Goldschmied is joining former Archial business Sparch as a non-executive director, with his first board meeting set for next week in Hong Kong.
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Opinion
Never have so many owed so much...
Discussions about planning policy reform risk getting bogged down in emotive rhetoric
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Opinion
An inside view of Leicester's gem
Twenty-odd years ago, I was shown round the Leicester Engineering Building (Inspiration, September 2) by the then professor of engineering.
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Opinion
Grayson Perry's fresh inspiration
Artist Grayson Perry was at London’s ICA last week discussing the use of ornament in architecture.
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Opinion
Finch on the Frontline
After Guardian architecture correspondent Jonathan Glancey pulled out of Tuesday’s debate on the merits of the architectural press, his place was taken by Paul Finch who joined journos and architects at the war reporters’ hideout the Frontline Club in Paddington.
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Opinion
Finance is the key to planning
Regarding proposed changes to planning rules, what’s needed is for the government to allow local authorities greater freedom to borrow money to finance infrastructure, acquire land and assemble development sites.
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Opinion
The Hoxton effect
One of the first rules for a RIBA president is not to talk in metaphors or even riddles.
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Analysis
Can we design out terrorism?
As the US marks the 10th anniversary of September 11, BD speaks to architects and engineers about how the attacks have affected the way we build tall towers
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Opinion
Tripoli's burnt-out case
The Foreign Office might have scaled back its embassy-building ambitions for the time being but even its penny pinchers can’t deny that there’s one embassy project that is ripe for more than an austerity refurb: Tripoli.
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Technical
Het Entreehuis home at Groote Sheere estate by Bureau B+B
A new Dutch twist on the thatched roof
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Opinion
RIBA’s attempts to be 'cool' make it irrelevant
In a week when the front pages of the right-wing national press have been filled with stories about planning legislation, is the RIBA lobbying a hostile government for a greater role for architects in delivering this “sustainable development”? No?
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Opinion
Should the BBC be a patron of architecture?
Yes says Chris Brown, its position as a publicly funded body demands that it commissions good design; but Emma Boon feels Auntie should be more careful with the taxpayers’ pursestrings
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Features
Liquid architecture
As Adam Khan’s visitor centre launches, we remember the only other floating design to feature in BD
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Opinion
Correspondent missing in action
Sadly, Guardian architecture correspondent Jonathan Glancey pulled out of Tuesday’s debate on the merits or otherwise of the architectural press because he “had to go to Ronchamp”.
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