All Building Design articles in 27 November 2009 – Page 3
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Analysis
London’s journey into space
Is the Great Spaces scheme a dilution of the previous mayor’s programme or a refinement?
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Opinion
Off the scale
I am surprised that the RIBA’s decision to abandon fee scale graphs (News October 30) has not been more roundly welcomed
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Opinion
Papal rebuke
What did the architect say to the Pope? Hopefully something as cerebral as the Pope said to the architects in his audience on Saturday, which included Daniel Libeskind and Zaha Hadid.
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Opinion
The simple life
Simple, workable and delightful buildings no longer exist, replaced with buildings that are far too clever for their own good
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Technical
Oak is at the heart of Talk Talk HQ interior
Found Associates has used fumed oak parquet to set the tone for the office
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Review
Wholly Smoke! Colourful London guide is a delight
Jones and Woodward’s offers an updated edition of their London guide with a crisp new design
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Opinion
Carbuncle too?
At first glance, the new National Museum in Rome looks just like the ferry terminal in Liverpool which won this year’s Carbuncle Cup (Features August 28)
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Opinion
Capital qualities
Cardiff is not a capital “of some sort” (Urban Trawl November 6) it is the capital of Wales.
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Opinion
Photo call
Who’s that next to Herman Hertzberger (Archive, November 20)? Is it the ever-youthful John Worthington, or just a lookalike?
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Opinion
Rome wasn’t built in a day
Ellis Woodman’s article on Zaha Hadid’s Maxxi building in Rome (Works November 20) applies conventional critical analysis to unconventional contexts
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Opinion
We can’t design buildings on our own
Unless we can develop a sense of common purpose all collaboration is doomed to fail
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Technical
Stiff & Trevillion brings stripped-back look to Jamie’s Italian
TV chef adds design ingredients to Guildford restaurant
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Building Study
Square dancing at Barking Central
Muf’s wide variety of interventions, from an arboretum to a pseudo ruin, are a comment on the worst excesses of Barking Central, but create one of the most extraordinary public spaces in London
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Features
Best’s bachelor pad was an own goal
The footballer only lived in Frazer Crane’s luxury house for three years
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Opinion
Should architects resign from bad projects?
Yes, says Peter Barber, we have responsibilities beyond our paymasters; while Mary Duggan counters that persevering is more of a statement than resigning
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Opinion
Ask an architect
While Stuart Lipton, John Sorrell, Paul Finch and Nicholas Serota are all fine people and by and large know something about good architecture, they do represent government’s reluctance in England to put architects in the top adviser jobs (News November 20)
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Review
The AA’s First Works exhibition takes us back to the future
A survey of early projects by stellar architects is the gospel according to the AA, says Niall Hobhouse
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