All Building Design articles in 19 June 2009 – Page 3
-
News
Wilkinson Eyre’s Oxford Maggies Centre wins planning
Wilkinson Eyre’s treehouse-style cancer centre has won planning permission
-
Opinion
Bonny prince
I work with communities where the planners, architects and corporations they represent are riding roughshod over livelihoods and treasured environments
-
Opinion
Rally to Rogers
It’s with no surprise that we read the people’s architect Prince Charles is single-handedly able to alter the course of one of the most important projects in London this decade
-
News
Architecture minister lays into unacceptable condition of West End theatres
Architecture minister Barbara Follett has attacked the state of London’s historic theatres
-
Opinion
We can’t all run back to daddy
Recently your magazine, to my despair, has highlighted the snobbery of the architectural world (News June 12)
-
News
Corby Cube presses on
Hawkins Brown’s £27 million landmark building for Corby town centre, Northampton-shire, has topped out
-
Opinion
Stuck on style
The discussion about a suitable architectural form for the expansion of Oxford University (Leader June 5) steps once again into the modernism versus traditionalism debate, which springs up in all historic and conservation environments
-
Opinion
What’s in a name? Quite a lot
Changing a building’s name when it changes hands is confusing and disrespectful to the original client?
-
Opinion
Public were the real killers
It was the people, not the prince, who delivered the death blow to Rogers’ Chelsea Barracks plans
-
Opinion
Liverpool myopia could prove Follett’s folly
Given the sensitivity of Scousers to criticism of their fine city, architecture minister Barbara Follett may not want to visit Liverpool any time soon.
-
Opinion
Waking the dead
Owen Hatherley (Opinion June 22) notes that sobriety and abstraction are fashionable virtues for memorials but architects often seem to have problems distinguishing between the zeitgeist and a rather more holistic and historical attitude towards sculpture and memorials
-
Review
Political and cultural density of the mosque
The adventures of Islam in Anglo-Saxon Europe intrigue Alma White
-
Opinion
This PFI critique has a vested interest
Unison isn’t offering us a workable alternative procurement method
-
Opinion
Are engineers given enough credit for their work?
Yes, they are the session musicians to architecture’s pop stars, says Mark Whitby; no, counters Andrew Best, the best engineers share in the creative process
-
Review
The paper chase is over – what now?
Managing document issue may have changed but there’s no need to mourn the days of paper filing
-
Features
Client’s non-payment of fees is hurting cashflow
My practice is dealing with our first claim on our professional indemnity insurance from a client, who refuses to pay our overdue fees
-
Building Study
Hawkins Brown's Oxford University’s biochemistry research facilities, Oxford
A two-phased reimagining of Oxford University’s biochemistry research facilities aims to put straight years of damaging piecemeal development
-
Review
Boym celebrate architecture’s black list
Models of buildings made notorious through disaster have been the stock in trade of New York product design studio Boym
-
Features
Should architects take a lesson from the Apprentice?
What can architects learn from Alan Sugar's show?
-
Features
Why slime oozes appeal for the planet’s future
Anna Winston meets Rachel Armstrong the doctor turned sci-fi writer and pioneer of ‘living architecture’
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Next Page