All Building Design articles in 25 September 2009 – Page 2
-
News
Cycle to Cannes ride to MIPIM registration opens
Registration has opened for next year’s Cycle to Cannes sponsored ride for professionals working in architecture, development or planning.
-
News
Chipperfield's Zurich art gallery scheme revised
David Chipperfield Architects’ competition winning design for an extension to a Zurich art gallery has been modified following the jury's recommendations.
-
Review
BD's guide to your cultural week- September 28 to October 4
Hungry? Hear BD columnist Carolyn Steel discuss why we are all slaves to our stomachs for Manchester Food week. But if you've had your fill, check out Warhol's philosophy on art and commercial glamour with the Tate Modern
-
News
Keith Williams wins Vauxhall tower approval
Keith Williams has won permission for his controversial 24-storey tower for Vauxhall after a four-day planning inquiry.
-
News
English Heritage backs OMA's Commonwealth Institute revamp
English Heritage has backed OMA’s plans to transform London’s former Commonwealth Institute into a new home for the Design Museum, it was announced today.
-
News
Princes Foundation cleared over lobbying claims
The Charity Commission has exonerated the Prince’s Foundation for the Built Environment over claims it was being used as the Prince of Wales’s “private lobbying firm”.
-
Multimedia
BD Podcast: Daniel Moylan on design in the capital and Anne Lacaton
Deputy leader of Kensington and Chelsea council Daniel Moylan is this week's special guest, speaking about why the Commonwealth Institute redesign deserves the go-ahead, Richard Rogers' resignation and Euston arch.
-
News
Crisis of confidence batters large practices
RIBA survey shows 90% do not predict workloads to rise, as top brass quit to go it alone
-
News
RIBA gets Ball rolling on review of regulation
The RIBA is to scrutinise the system of architectural regulation and registration in a wide-ranging review due for completion before the end of the year
-
News
Firms refute Wilkinson fees
Two property firms being sued by Wilkinson Eyre for alleged unpaid fees have said they were forced to spend close to the amount being claimed redrawing the original design because it cost too much
-
News
Bright future for Scots Lighthouse?
Scotland’s minister for culture has raised hopes that Glasgow’s Lighthouse can remain the national architecture centre
-
News
Hodge returns to architecture post
Margaret Hodge’s surprise return as architecture minister this week received a mixed reaction from the profession
-
News
KPF ships New York big guns to London
Chairman Gene Kohn crosses pond to boost morale following walkout
-
Opinion
We’ll do the math
I wish to clarify the situation regarding the authorship of the masterplan for the former Radcliffe Infirmary site in Oxford (News analysis September 18)
-
Opinion
Cladding is not just skin deep
To answer Owen Hatherley’s rather naive question about over-cladding older residential tower blocks (Opinion September 18), most residential blocks have to be refurbished and upgraded with residents in place.
-
News
Permission for pathology facility
Nightingale Associates and Make have won planning permission for a new science building at Oxford University
-
News
EH decides whether to appeal over Doon Street
English Heritage has 12 days to decide whether to continue its battle against Lifschutz Davidson Sandiland’s controversial 43-storey Doon Street tower after a High Court judge backed the scheme
-
News
Council ‘running down’ Robin Hood Gardens
A senior opposition councillor has accused Tower Hamlets Council of ignoring maintenance problems at Robin Hood Gardens because it wants residents to move out so it can demolish the estate
-
News
Pawson arts hub opens
A combined art space and theatre designed by Terry Pawson Architects for a site in the Irish town of Carlow is set to open tomorrow
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Next Page