All Building Design articles in 11 December 2009 – Page 3
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Opinion
Will design thresholds improve public buildings?
Yes, says Margaret Hodge, it’s daft to settle for second best in public programmes; while Robert Adam counters that all they’ll do is enforce the establishment view
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Review
Stern’s bulletins from the front line of architecture
The theories in Robert Stern’s new book Architecture on the Edge of Postmodernism sound convincing, but the realities surround us
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Review
Architects on the epiphany of inhabitation
Curated by Juhani Pallasmaa, the V&A’s second Sustaining Identity symposium discussed the spirit of place with speakers Charles Correa and South Africa’s Gawie Fagan
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Opinion
Season of humbug and hot air
If we’re really serious about the planet, let’s debate more and buy less
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Technical
Adam Khan’s wetlands centre floats between land and water
The design of the Brockholes Wetland Nature Reserve buildings in Lancashire draw inspiration from the villages of Iraq’s Marsh Arabs
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Features
Dot to dot results: 4 December 2009
Last week’s winner was Jyh Lee of Stephenson Bell Architects in Manchester, who identified Dominique Perrault’s Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris
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Features
Dot to dot - 11 December 2009
Connect the dots, name the building and send us your answer by 10am on Wednesday December 16 for a chance to win a copy of The Modern Wing: Renzo Piano and the Art Institute of Chicago
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News
Edinburgh Council approves BDP conference centre extension
Edinburgh City Council has given the green light to plans to enlarge the Edinburgh International Conference Centre.
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News
Foster & Partners to design Mexico medical campus
Foster & Partners has been appointed to design a centre of medical excellence in Mexico City.
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News
Foreign Office Architects to close as partners split
Award-winning practice set to cease trading once current schemes are complete
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News
Government throws out Foster Ealing project
Communities secretary John Denham has overturned a £500 million mixed-use scheme by Foster & Partners and HKR Architects proposed for west London.
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News
Boost for global bursaries
Students and young architects wanting to work in the developing world have had their chances boosted after the annual funding for the dedicated RIBA/Institution of Civil Engineers bursary was doubled.
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News
Photographer hit by anti-terror laws
A leading architectural photographer has been stopped and searched by police in the City of London under anti-terror laws.
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