All Building Design articles in 15 January 2010 – Page 2
-
Competitions
Three Stirling finalists make Civic Trust Awards shortlist
BDP’s Liverpool One masterplan, AHMM’s Kentish Town Health Centre and Rogers Stirk Harbour’s Spanish winery have been shortlisted for this year’s Civic Trust Awards.
-
Review
Richard Hamilton- March 3 to April 25
A solo exhibition by one of the world’s most respected living artists, Richard Hamilton, who has embraced many different mediums since the 1950s, including painting, printmaking, installation and industrial design.
-
Competitions
Hadid and Chipperfield among architects on Brit design awards shortlist
Thirteen schemes have been shortlisted for this year¹s Brit Insurance Design Awards, including projects by Zaha Hadid Architects, Tony Fretton and 6a Architects.
-
Review
Henry Moore- February 24 to August 8
This exhibition takes a fresh look at Moore's work and legacy, presenting over 150 stone sculptures, wood carvings, bronzes and drawings.
-
Review
Chris Ofili- January 27 to May 16
A major survey of Ofili’s career that brings together over 45 paintings, as well as pencil drawings and watercolours from the mid 1990s to today.
-
Review
Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective- February 10 to May 3
An exhibition celebrating the life and work of Arshile Gorky (c.1904-1948), who along with Rothko, Pollock and de Kooning, Gorky was one of the most powerful American painters of the twentieth century.
-
Review
Van Doesburg and the International Avant-Garde: Constructing a New World- February 4 to May 16
Tate Modern presents the first major exhibition in the UK devoted to the Dutch artist and pivotal figure of the European avant-garde,
-
News
First images of TP Bennett's Walthamstow Stadium redevelopment
These are the first images of TP Bennett’s controversial plans to redevelop Walthamstow Stadium, one of London’s last surviving greyhound tracks.
-
Review
BD's guide to your cultural week- January 18 to January 24
Take a bird's eye view of London from the confines of the Balfron tower or join the debate on an influential Italian renaissance figure who may have been more famous for the shape of his nose than his arts patronage, in this week's cultural guide
-
News
OMA teams wins Hong Kong campus scheme
A team featuring Dutch practice Office for Metropolitan Architecture and local practice Leigh & Orange Architects has won a college campus scheme in Hong Kong.
-
News
Cabe calls for further FOA input on New Street Station
Foreign Office Architects’ plans for a revamp of Birmingham New Street railway station could end up being watered down, Cabe has warned.
-
News
Moscow architecture museum director David Sarkisyan dies
David Sarkisyan, the director of Moscow’s Schusev architecture museum, has died aged 62.
-
News
RIBA calls for radical solutions for British coastal cities
British cities near the coast are at risk of extreme flooding with urgent action needed now to protect them, the RIBA and the Institution of Civil Engineers have claimed.
-
News
Civic unrest over square in Aberdeen
Local opposition is mounting against a £140 million scheme (pictured) to create a civic square in central Aberdeen
-
News
HOK to axe 10% of staff in capital
HOK is embarking on another round of job cuts and admits 10% of its employees in London face the axe
-
News
Crossrail Central hires chief architect
Crossrail veteran Ewan McLean has been appointed chief architect for the central London section of the £16 billion Crossrail project
-
News
EH rejects ‘unique steel houses’ listing bid
Two “unique” steel-framed houses in north London that are under threat of demolition have been narrowly refused listed status
-
News
Medical first for Foster
The first hospital ever designed by Foster & Partners, the £21 million Circle Bath hospital in Somerset, has opened
-
News
Featherstone Young takes flight with two-winged Rutland house
Featherstone Young has won planning permission for an £800,000 family house on the outskirts of the small village of Wing in Rutland
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Next Page