All Building Design articles in 28 November 2008 – Page 2
-
Technical
Spanish tile industry reacts to economic challenges with innovative trends and a new perceived value
Cersaie, the international exhibition of ceramic tiles and bathroom furnishings in its 26th year, was held in Bologna from the 29 September – 4 October 2008.
-
Technical
Tile of Spain Update: CEVISAMA Review
CEVISAMA 2008, the 26th International Exhibition for Architectural Ceramics and Bathroom Furnishings, took place in February 2008 at the Feria exhibition centre in Valencia.
-
News
McDowell & Benedetti wins RIBA contest for JCB factory site
London-based architect McDowell & Benedetti has beaten Glenn Howells Architects in the final stage of a competition to redesign a 9ha factory site in Uttoxeter, Staffordshire.
-
News
Piano completes Chicago Art Institute extension
Ambitious project will ‘levitate’, says designer
-
Opinion
Opinion: Keep a cool head in the recession, don't rush overseas
Scrambling for work overseas might not be the best way for firms to ride out the recession, cautions Gensler’s Chris Johnson
-
News
Patel Taylor and Kinnear Landscape Architects shortlisted for Libeskind’s Imperial War Museum North exterior spaces
UK practices Patel Taylor and Kinnear Landscape Architects have made it onto the shortlist for an RIBA international competition to develop proposals for the external spaces at Manchester’s Imperial War Museum North.
-
News
Reid Jubb Brown’s Northumberland Lake House goes for planning
Reid Jubb Brown has unveiled plans for Lake House, a country house near Morpeth in Northumberland, which will have a curved outer shell made from green oak.
-
Blogs
News Junkie: 29 and 30 December
Dubai vows to keep building, Prussian palace reconstruction, ’Soviet boroughs’ built under Labour
-
News
More construction jobs cut in Dubai
One of Dubai's biggest developers Nakheel has announced 500 job losses after revealing that a number of its projects have been put on hold.
-
News
Weymouth's sailing academy is first 2012 venue completed
Work has been completed on the first venue for the 2012 Olympic games at the Weymouth & Portland National Sailing Academy (WPNSA).
-
News
Make slashes workforce and closes Edinburgh office
Make architects has cut its headcount from 130 to 100 and has closed its Edinburgh office.
-
News
Sydney Opera architect Jørn Utzon dies
Jørn Utzon, the Danish architect who designed the iconic Sydney Opera House, has died.
-
Opinion
Snuggle up
Smashing! After the president’s missive (News November 14), I feel so relieved and very cosy.
-
Opinion
Power problem
Do architects really want planning authorities to have even more power to interfere with design? What is the relationship between this idea and the article on the following page of BD last week, “Architects strike out over New Forest rejections”?
-
News
Ravensbourne sets a pattern
Construction work has begun on Foreign Office Architects’ £50 million Ravensbourne College of Design & Commun-ication, on the Greenwich peninsula in London.
-
Features
O is for Onassis... and Obama
Jackie Onassis washed up at the RIBA’s now defunct Heinz Gallery in Portman Square back in 1979, and BD was there to capture the moment
-
Opinion
Strike a light
Paul Thompson’s appointment as the new rector of the Royal College of Art has been met with howls of protest from staff, Boots hears.
-
Features
Interview: Ian Ritchie
Ian Ritchie is an architect prepared to break with convention. He tells Amanda Baillieu how his involuntary departure from the Westfield development at Shepherd’s Bush hasn’t deterred him from standing up for what he believes in
-
Opinion
A way out of the personal mobility hole
As ailing car firms seek bail-outs, it’s time for a radical rethink of transport
-
Opinion
Here’s an idea on planning...
A host of architectural worthies has approved the planning bill’s stated ambition to prevent poor design (News November 21). Am I alone in seeing this as bound to fail? Rogers, Howarth and others ought to know better.
- Previous Page
- Page1
- Page2
- Page3
- Page4
- Next Page