All Building Design articles in 24 September 2010 – Page 2
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News
Toyo Ito wins Praemium Imperiale
Toyo Ito has been awarded the Japanese Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale architecture laureate for 2010.
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Features
From the archive: ArtNet special
It may have only had a five-year life-span, but Peter Cook’s ArtNet, founded and closed in the seventies, had considerable impact on London’s architectural community.
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Competitions
To let: house and gallery in Aude
An art gallery with family accomodation to let in the south of France.
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News
Lottery boost for Pawson's Design Museum project
The Heritage Lottery Fund has awarded £300,000 towards the Design Museum’s relocation into the former Commonwealth Institute building.
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News
Shapps to make community right-to-build schemes easier
Housing minister Grant Shapps has lowered the proposed approval threshold for community right-to-build schemes from 90% to 75% following pressure from the public.
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News
Foster's academy building is a nightmare, says school's boss
A flagship academy school, designed by Foster & Partners, has been branded a “nightmare” by the woman who runs it.
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News
Steven Holl and MVVA win St Louis arch competition
A team led by New York architect MVVA and Steven Holl Architects has beaten rival entries including Foster’s to revamp the area surrounding Eero Saarinen’s St Louis Gateway Arch in Missouri, USA.
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News
Murray suffers punctured lung on charity bike ride
Former BD Editor and NLA chairman Peter Murray has been taken to hospital after being injured in a bicycle accident while cycling to Brussels to raise money for charity.
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News
Former RMJM boss joins Graeme Massie
Brian Stewart, the former boss of RMJM, famous for leading work on the troubled Scottish Parliament building, has joined the award-winning Graeme Massie Architects.
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News
Archial legal claims over unpaid fees revealed
Architect involved in at least four legal cases prior to going into administration
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News
English Heritage to survive bonfire of quangos, says report
English Heritage will survive the government’s cull of quangos and absorb two other organisations, according to a list compiled by the Cabinet Office this week.
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News
Hadid speaks up for South Bank Centre
Zaha Hadid has criticised as “unbelievable” the government’s decision not to list the South Bank Centre, insisting the 1960s complex deserved statutory protection
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News
Sheppard Robson bags £21 million Manchester Royal Eye Hospital scheme
Sheppard Robson has been appointed to design a new centre for bio-medical research at the Manchester Royal Eye Hospital.
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News
Alsop school opens as Archial hits rocks
It has been a bittersweet week for Alsop Sparch, whose Michael Faraday School in Southwark, south London, reached completion as the practice’s parent company Archial announced it had entered into administration
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Opinion
Can spirituality be set in stone?
The Pope’s visit raises the question of how architects can offer a sense of the spiritual
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Opinion
Redesigning Stuttgart with vuvuzelas
Noisy protests over its railway station scheme are helping to redefine a changing city
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Opinion
Ranting at Raven
If the modern professional design student is no longer tied to the workspace (Ravensbourne College, Works September 17) why an eight-storey decorated shed stuck out in Greenwich?
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Opinion
Zaha at her peak
What do Zaha Hadid and Patrik Schumacher have in common with mountaineers Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing?
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Opinion
Follow Jamie
I am sure I am not the only architect that recalls the legacy of education in wretched temporary buildings; dispirited teachers trying to instil some form of education into uninterested and callow youth, closeted in drab green huts, propped up and mired in the mud, with buckets in strategic places ...
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