All Archive Titles articles – Page 111

  • Archive Titles

    Dinner rush

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    The EU is keen to decentralise its services. For the 250 mandarins of the Food and Veterinary Office, that means upping sticks to Ireland, to a timber-lined base with a magnificent dining room at its heart.

  • Archive Titles

    Delaying the fall of Rome

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    18th-century artist Giovanni Battisti Piranesi is best-known for his etchings of ruins but he battled for Rome’s superiority as if the empire still existed.

  • Archive Titles

    Upstart: Ian Davidson's education for the future

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Recent research by the ARB and Kingston University uncovered real concern among students and practitioners that the education system is not adequately preparing students for practice.

  • Archive Titles

    Council of war

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Not content with laying siege to the BBC, it seems middle-aged, middle-class white Britons are also upsetting the Arts Council of England.

  • Archive Titles

    Principles: Net contributions

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    How a net contribution clause can save you from 'joint and several' liability claims

  • Archive Titles

    Conference call

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    The TUC is ditching its old adversarial image and has modernised its London headquarters to prove it. These days, it makes a fortune letting out its high-tech new facilities to City firms. Hugh Broughton was the architect who brought the building into the 21st century.

  • Archive Titles

    Breaking the mould

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Copthorn Homes wanted neo-Georgian for its East End development. Thanks to architect Proctor Matthews, what it got is a new model for high-density city living

  • Archive Titles

    A brush with St Basil's

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Nineteenth-century lantern slides, projected onto a wall or screen, were the precursors of today's 3mm slides. Often hand-coloured, they presented views of architectural subjects and transformed the study of architecture.

  • Archive Titles

    Avoiding the cracks

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    There's more to renovating a 19th-century glasshouse than replacing the broken windows. As Tim Bushe found out, it's all about the definition of conservation and the art of compromise.

  • Archive Titles

    For art's sake

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Artworks look their best when viewed by daylight but too much of it can ruin them. How do you get the lighting levels just right on gallery projects? The answer is adjustable shading.

  • Archive Titles

    Debate: The view from the ARB

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    For the past two months, our mailbag has been filled with worried letters about the new minimum rate for PII cover. Here, ARB registrar For the past two months, our mailbag has been filled with worried letters about the new minimum rate for PII cover. Here, ARB registrar Robin Vaughan ...

  • Archive Titles

    Brief encounter: Andrew Doolan

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Meet the Scottish architect and developer who is bankrolling the new £25,000 RIAS Award for Architecture.

  • Archive Titles

    Planners burst Alsop's bubble

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    Will Alsop's preparations for his first London exhibition were spoilt when he was told that the city could do without an over-inflated windbag.

  • Archive Titles

    All American: Innovation in American Architecture

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    When a book called All American: Innovation in American Architecture features an armed forces recruiting station as its first project, it questions the cliché that Americans have no sense of irony.

  • Archive Titles

    Artists, child actors and tired walkers find shelter in Hakes' converted barn

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    In the 16th century, the twisted timbers of the Aisled Barn in Lancashire stooped over peasants as they threshed their crops. Today, they frame installations and school plays.Young London practice Hakes Associates has converted the grade II-listed building into an exhibition centre that also serves as a shelter for walkers ...

  • Archive Titles

    Those four little letters …

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    A couple of weeks ago, I joined the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire branches of the RIBA for their evening meeting.

  • Archive Titles

    Country living on Channel 4

    2002-04-04T00:00:00Z

    'Last night I dreamt I went to Manderston.' That could be the cry of volunteers for Edwardian Country House, Channel 4's upcoming sequel to The 1940s House.

  • Archive Titles

    Treading water

    2002-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Schmidt Hammer & Lassen's headquarters for Nykredit is by far the finest new building on Copenhagen's waterfront. Yet, along with other developments nearby, it has stolen the harbour from the city. By Merete Mollerup

  • Archive Titles

    Under the skin

    2002-03-19T00:00:00Z

    London's financial district is filled with air-conditioned office space. But thanks to Arup Associates' research into double-skin facades, those energy-guzzling boxes are about to get a greener neighbour: a naturally ventilated complex whose occupants can actually open their windows.

  • Archive Titles

    Shanghai skyscraper to be world’s tallest

    2002-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Tokyo contractor Mori Building has announced plans to restart work on the Shanghai World Financial Center after tweaking the design to ensure that the skyscraper is the world’s tallest building. Construction started on the mixed-use tower, originally designed by New York architect Kohn Pedersen Fox to be 460m high, in ...