All Building Design articles in 20 November 2009 – Page 3
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News
Funding flows to coastal resorts
Culture and heritage landmarks at seven coastal resorts are to be revamped under the government’s Sea Change programme, the Department for Culture, Media & Sport announced this week
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News
Concern over Hackney’s approval of Foster plan
Campaigners say Bishops Place was pushed through by developer
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News
Birmingham blow as EH urges library listing
City’s architectural ambitions dealt double whammy as key figure quits
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News
Haworth Tompkins puts RCA painters under one roof
Haworth Tompkins’ new home for the Royal College of Arts’ painting department, the Sackler building, opened yesterday
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Opinion
Lost in the name of sustainability
The demolition of an innovative 19th century steel girder bridge is entirely unnecessary
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Opinion
When it's wrong to walk
Refusing to work for difficult clients is likely to result in worse buildings in the sectors that matter most
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Features
Help with the stairs
Making change easy is the claim of the recently released Vectorworks 2010 cad software. Jonathan Reeves finds out whether it delivers
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Opinion
Will the Glasgow Lighthouse thrive in public hands?
Peter Wilson says, no, it has long ceased to deliver any genuine national function, but Page Park founder David Page argues that it is time a national institution found a setting in Scotland’s biggest city
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Opinion
Solid evidence
Your editorial “Is global warming hot air?” (November 6) does a great disservice to our profession. To claim a “growing wealth of scientific evidence” that climate change is not predominantly man made, without citing this supposed evidence, either suggests that BD knows something the rest of us don’t, or BD ...
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Opinion
Don’t talk rubbish
Jonathan Glancey’s article, “Home is where the bullying is” (November 13) is unnecessarily unkind to those who have the unpleasant task of dealing with our recycling and waste at “town dumps”
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Features
Why has the RIBA ditched its fee scale graphs?
Why has the RIBA abandoned fee scale graphs in the depths of a recession when the profession needs them the most?
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Features
What are the odds of defeating spam?
Spam email is a significant problem for many architects’ practices, accounting for more than 50% of incoming email
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Building Study
Roman horror day at Zaha Hadid's Maxxi
Maxxi, Rome’s National Museum of 21st Century Arts, displays a cynical disregard for its purpose, that marks a conceit too far for Zaha Hadid
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Opinion
Keep a cool head
Our profession has a key role in adapting for the consequences of the 10-century-long trend of global warming, but this does not mean we have to dumbly accept the assertions of the “greenhouse gas” proponents. Many of the same climate campaigners were frightening us with a new ice age, as ...
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Technical
Span house comes out of woodwork
Using a modular typology of timber and glass, Friend & Company has reinvented an Eric Lyons Span house in south-east London
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Review
Colquhoun's essays: Philosophy in practice
A new book of Alan Colquhoun’s writings reveal a man bent on using rationale to underpin architectural discourse
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Review
Cities of the Lens
A recent Architecture Foundation debate explores how the camera can help construct an ‘alternative urbanism’
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Opinion
Do you have a better mousetrap?
Recession can be a good time to launch a business, but don’t bother if you’re offering nothing new.
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