All Archive Titles articles – Page 153
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A very industrious year
If you thought you'd seen the end of industrial chic with last year's unveiling of the Tate Modern, think again. This year will see another rash of industrial buildings reopening in new guises, from Battersea to Gateshead.
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Help for training
You may be able to get help from the government towards the costs of your CPD training.
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Taken at face value
A tight budget inspired rather than constrained Adjaye & Associates' vision in creating an unusual family home in east London
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Experimental Houses
The design of most houses in this country is so banal that we must welcome any ideas, however wild.
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Playing to the crowd
Among the many architectural disasters of world fairs were occasional gems, such as E A Schiewe and Donald Nelson's theatre for the 1930s Chicago fair, which did its bit for US Modernism.
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Service Cores
This is a strangely matter-of-fact offering for an architect of Ken Yeang's standing.
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Charter for change
Sustainable improvement is central to the makeover of Charter School in Dulwich. The vision is shared by Penoye and Prasad which is putting the principle to a highly visible test.
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Caught in the web
This is the information age, where content is king. We look at three web-based content provider services to asses their ease of use, quality of content and speed.
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King of the castle
Fred Manson was using architecture to transform the London Borough of Southwark long before the term 'Bilbao-effect' had been invented. His latest project, the regeneration of Elephant and Castle, is London's most ambitious masterplan yet.
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Refurbishment and Upgrading of Buildings
Refurbishment and Upgrading of BuildingsDavid HighfieldE & F N Spon£39.95This book seems to be written more for surveyors and developers than architects, but provides a comprehensive and technically competent compendium of the issues associated with refurbishing old buildings, with interesting sections on underpinning, facade retention or even the possibilities of ...
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Between the lines
Mortar is seen as a mere jointing material. But brick buildings' green credentials, structural capabilities and aesthetics all largely depend on the type of mortar specified.
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Timber: Its Nature and Behaviour
The cover of this book wonderfully encapsulates its contents by depicting, through a print of the cellular structure of wood, the tied relationships between nature, science, and art.
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Architects workload survey
In the third quarter of last year workloads remained at a high level, although 18 per cent down on a year ago. Here we focus on changes in the education sector, which is rising towards one of the highest workload levels in five years.
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Twentieth-Century American Architecture
However you see it, a hundred years of American architecture in 350 pages must be concise.
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All-round performer
Building style and artistic purpose find cohesion in the disparate elements of Maidenhead's new arts centre.
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Modern House 2
Clare Melhuish's Modern House 2 covers 27 international houses and three projects.
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The Revolving Door Since 1881
The revolving door: everyone has used one; we have all been round and round, and round again, just for the fun of it.
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Wilkommen
The British Council wants to attract younger visitors in an attempt to improve Anglo-German relations. Its move into new offices in Berlin, designed by British-German duo Sauerbruch Hutton, is a very promising start.
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Switched on
What if we made a Christmas wish for our high street, imagining an animated feast of light, colour and imagery brightening up even the most down-at-heel urban centre? Inspired by the RIBA Journal campaign for better Christmas lights, architect Adam Scott invented a new process set to revolutionise the way ...
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Sucks to you
James Dyson and his vacuum cleaners have developed a corporate image of great British quirkiness and individuality. But even as his company's latest venture – a showroom in Paris – opens, it seems that his driving force is substance, rather than style.