All Building Design articles in 29 February 2008 – Page 3
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News
Rogers, Prasad, Smith on bikes
Richard Rogers, RIBA president Sunand Prasad and designer Paul Smith have become patrons of Cycle to Cannes for the epic event’s third year.
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News
Foster and Libeskind bet on Las Vegas...
Foster & Partners, Daniel Libeskind and Helmut Jahn of Chicago-based Murphy Jahn Architects have designed three neighbouring buildings as part of an $8 billion development in Las Vegas, touted as the largest privately financed project ever constructed in North America.
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News
Foster’s Beijing ‘gateway’ opens
Foster & Partners’ Beijing Airport terminal (pictured above) opened on Tuesday.
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Features
This frog could become a prince
Renovated by a sympathetic architect, Robin Hood Gardens could be a very desirable residence, says Jonathan Glancey
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Opinion
Battery housing
Can you have housing schemes with high densities which improve the viability of public transport?
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News
Medicine ball by FOA
Foreign Office Architects has revealed the final designs for its Institute of Legal Medicine in Madrid.
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News
Think Place’s Warsaw stadium scheme avoids lung damage
Think Place has unveiled the first images of its 21ha Park Swiatla masterplan in Warsaw, Poland.
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Review
Conference looks at the lost art of the new town
The Architecture Foundation’s New New Town conference shed light on how a century of new town development could inform our thinking on eco-towns
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News
Architecture ‘is a key creative industry’
Hodge said that the DCMS Creative Britain report, published last Friday, was still relevant to the profession — despite the fact that not a single detailed mention of architecture appears in the document.
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News
London architecture festival boosted by Arts Council cash
This year’s London Festival of Architecture, set to take place between June 20 and July 20, has secured a £90,000 funding boost from Arts Council England.
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Opinion
The most architectural film ever made
The death of screenwriter Alain Robbe-Grillet prompts a revisit of Last Year at Marienbad
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Opinion
Architects love totalitarians
At last a top architect has taken an “ethical stance” about working in China and other countries where democracy and human rights are violated (News February 15).
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News
BSF schools approved despite Cabe criticisms
£2 million design review panel seen as ‘hindrance rather than a benefit’
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News
All new homes to be future-proofed for the elderly
Every new home built in England will have to be designed to suit the needs of elderly people, the government announced this week.
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Opinion
Should all housing design take account of old age?
Future-proofed houses will stop us being forced to move to care homes, says Roger Battersby; while Stewart Baseley argues that it will make new housing more expensive
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Analysis
‘It’s a great place to live, absolutely’
Local residents give their views of what it’s like to live in Robin Hood Gardens, one of the 20th century’s great housing estates. Depressing? Not at all, they tell Rory Olcayto
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Technical
Bridging the gap at the AA’s Hooke Parke
Architects and AA tutors Valentin Bontjes van Beek and Natalie Rozencwajg’s web-like footbridge uses trees for its main supports
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News
44 Westgate wins planning
Planning permission has been granted for this £30 million office development in Newcastle city centre, designed by Carey Jones Architects.
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Features
Dot to Dot: February 29
Connect the dots, name the building and send us your answer by 10am on Wednesday for a chance to win Bronwen Riley’s new book on the architecture of Transylvania.
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News
Clavell Tower moves 25m inland
Clavell Tower, the historic folly at Kimmerage Bay, Dorset, was topped out on Monday.
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