All Archive Titles articles – Page 168
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Archive Titles
Saudi Arabia
Take time to first understand the culture here, founded on Islam, before getting to grips with business ethics and requirements. It’s easier to set up a branch office or practice in some Middle Eastern countries than others, but everywhere it is essential to have a local sponsor or partner. It ...
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Civil action
ABK’s new British Embassy in Moscow would never had been built had it not been for one man: Mark Bertram, the former head of the Foreign Office’s overseas estates department.
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Bon Vivant: Whitecroft’s light idea
An exciting, aesthetic fitting that ‘lifts’ any ceiling. A method of eliminating the dark patches on walls often associated with typical Lighting Guide 3 Category 2 schemes. Reduced discomfort glare with fewer shadows. A solution to oppressive environments where low ceiling heights rule out uplighters and suspended fixtures. Whitecroft Lighting ...
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Warsaw’s identity crisis
Last month it was announced that Frank Gehry has been commissioned to design a museum in Warsaw. If it goes ahead, it could be the biggest challenge yet for the metropolitan miracle worker.
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Talking shop
The CIBSE Daylight Group recently teamed up with the RIBA's Light Group to host a one-day presentation and discussion session. The subject? Daylighting and its use in new build retail facilities. The findings make for some very interesting reading.
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Off the shelf
While fast-tracking, awkward urban sites and tight budgets promise to make modular construction more relevant than ever, the image of these buildings has traditionally put off both clients and users. This is set to change as new technical developments herald an era in which modularity is expressed, not denied.
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The Netherlands: MVRDV
You can be sure a building is destined for fame when it earns a nickname before completion. Layla Dawson went to Rotterdam to meet MVRDV, designer of the “club sandwich”.
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This year's model
Changing Minicad's name to Vectorworks solved the problem of an unsexy label, but can Deihl Graphsoft's modelling software take on other strengths of the big names?
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Manhattan transfer
Nina Rappaport reports from New York on the Bridgemarket scheme, which has transformed a vast historic structure of bridge arches and vaults, from unglamorous storage and service area into a contemporary commercial centre for eating and shopping.
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Love thy neighbour
Most visitors to the Dome do not venture as far as the Greenwich Pavilion, the Richard Rogers Partnership's other Thames-side building. This is a pity – the building is a joy, where architecture, not content, is king.
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Look at me!
In a down-at-heel enclave of inner London, where the population doesn't have much to look up to, an exuberant new public building by iconoclastic practice Alsop & Störmer screams: "Over here! Come in, and see my books!"
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A slice of life
Tony Ray-Jones' photographs of Darbourne & Darke's Lillington Gardens estate were typical of the new reportage-style that emerged in the 1960s.
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Let's stick together
Fused glass is generally considered too labour-intensive and technically complex to be used on an architectural scale, but two new projects are helping to bridge that gap between art and architecture.
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Language lessons
In Words and Buildings, out this month, architectural historian Adrian Forty looks at architecture's troubled relationship with language and analyses some of the fuzziest words in the critical vocabulary of modern architecture. Here, Forty explains why he wrote the book.
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Leading lady
London's Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, has been given much more than a regular facelift. The addition of a "village" of connected studios, workshops and administrative offices has transformed the grand dame of British opera and ballet into one of the best-equipped and magical theatres in the world.
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Local hero
Architect George Ferguson is a bit of a hero in Bristol, where he is used to taking on developers and planners in his passionate desire to create proper urban communities.
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Where the tent is no longer a gimmick
Transport terminals and stadiums provide the settings for almost every historically significant tensile structure you care to name, and now are the only building types where fabric is a truly established part of the architectural vocabulary. Dan Fox asks why it is these two sectors that brought the big tents ...
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F-Plan: visualisation the Swedish way
Manufacturer-devised light planning packages are often an excellent showcase for a given company’s products, and the lit effects they can create. Nine out of every ten projects, though, make use of a variety of fittings sourced from various producers. With this in mind, forward-thinking luminaire specialist Fagerhult has devised F-Plan, ...
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Archive Titles
The Norman Foster Studio
The Norman Foster Studio: Consistency through diversityMalcolm QuantrillE&FN Spon£49.50Malcolm Quantrill's new tome on the work of Norman Foster's studio strikes a good balance. There's an intriguing dose of the personal (including photos of baby Norman on holiday with his family), a smattering of interviews, an informative text, in-depth analysis of ...