All Building Design articles in 11 June 2010 – Page 3
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Technical
Cladding Renzo Piano’s Shard
The facade of Piano’s glass tower at London Bridge station is designed to be as transparent and flush as possible
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Opinion
How the other half builds
The gap between low-cost housing and luxury developments grows ever wider.
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Review
The driving force behind Maggie's Centres designs
Jencks and Heathcote explain how people and their real needs and feelings were put at the heart of the Maggie’s design process.
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Opinion
Has money been wasted on school design work?
Yes, says Katharine Quarmby, the programme is wasteful and overcomplicated; but John Waldron argues that BSF has done well in the face of a massive maintenance backlog.
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Review
Refuge: Five Cities – photographs by Bas Princen
Looking at Bas Princen’s photos of Middle East fringe cities at NY’s Storefront museum is like visiting other worlds
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Technical
Warwick Clinical Trials Unit by MJP Architects
This building for Warwick University uses composite timber curtain walling to improve energy performance and create an elegant facade
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Opinion
Period features for Alsop, Finch and Zogolovitch
Fancy dress shops are being severely tested in the run up to the London Festival of Architecture, Boots learns
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Review
Shanghai Expo 2010
Consumerism and environmental concerns make awkward bedfellows at China’s Shanghai Expo
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Review
Building a Library 15: Experiencing Architecture by Steen Eiler Rasmussen
Robert Harbison picks 50 books that should feature in any architectural library
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Opinion
Correction: 11 June 2010
Contrary to our story on page 2 last week, there is no current threat of redundancies at Nightingale Associates following its sale to Canadian firm, IBI Group. BD would like to apologise for the error.
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Features
Dot to Dot: 11 June 2010
Connect the dots, name the building and send us your answer by 10am on Wednesday June 16 for a chance to win a copy of Gentle Landmarks: Marks Barfield Architects.
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Features
Dot to dot results: June 04 2010
Last week’s winner was Lucy Duckham of Purcell Miller Tritton in Oxford, who identified Philip Johnson’s AT&T (now Sony) building in New York
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News
Presidential boost for low-pay issue
Parnaby makes pledge as BD readers are given a final chance to question three candidates.
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News
Granary revamp gets under way
Work has begun on Pollard Thomas Edwards Architects’ £3.5 million restoration and extension of a derelict 19th century granary building in east London.
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News
Architects slam 'garden grabbing' law as naive
Architects have criticised the government’s much-vaunted changes to planning law, dubbing them a “charter for nimbyism” that will scupper many housing projects.
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