All Archive Titles articles – Page 172

  • Archive Titles

    Budget forecast

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Integrated job-costing and accounting software can be as integral to the efficiency of a practice as CAD, and makes everyone’s lives easier, even those of the creative types.

  • Archive Titles

    Art on the high street

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Caruso St John is an enigma. The practice claims to work hard at designing buildings that are part of the everyday. Yet, although it is sandwiched between a Woolworths and a BHS, its competition-winning Walsall Art Gallery, which opens this month, is far from ordinary.

  • Archive Titles

    The Architecture of John Lautner

    2000-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The Architecture of John Lautner Photographs by Alan Weintraub, text by Alan Hess Thames & Hudson £40 Remember that fantastic house where James Bond had to fight the gorgeous guards in Diamonds Are Forever? It's so over the top as a house that one assumed it was a film set. ...

  • Archive Titles

    Team players

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Thanks to new networking services, using the Internet to transfer project information between offices is an alternative way for even the smallest office to work more effectively.

  • Archive Titles

    Philips X-Tends luminaire technology

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Lamps giant Philips clearly means business as the lighting industry enters the new Millennium. The wraps are off on a raft of new and innovative products – including the X-Tend luminaire and its OLC optics, and a revised version of the popular ArenaVision floodlights – all of which are ready ...

  • Archive Titles

    Lights of passage

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Crossing the Thames four times while running under historic parts of the Capital, complex engineering challenges had to be overcome by architects and designers working on the Jubilee Line extension – not least when it came to the station's lighting designs. Brian Sims embarks on a ...

  • Archive Titles

    Taking light to task

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Many of today's office lighting schemes are bound by the "square array, 500 lux Category 2 downlighter" syndrome – which hardly ever satisfies end-user needs. Grant Daniels examines the pitfalls of this traditional but arguably flawed approach, outlining the way ahead for tomorrow's design teams.

  • Archive Titles

    Pure Jeanius

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Independent consultant Into has developed a flexible lighting solution for jeans giant Levi Strauss that marries pure retail illumination and entertainment lighting – with stunning end results. Brian Sims reports from London's famous Regent Street.

  • Archive Titles

    Good practice makes perfect

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Lighting for visual function and amenity, architectural integration, operating costs and the development of lighting design – just some of the issues covered in Good Practice Guide 272: Lighting for people, energy efficiency and architecture.

  • Archive Titles

    Victory through diversity

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    The future is Egan, according to all the experts, but what does this mean in reality? RIBAJ spoke to three architects who have evolved ways of working that give them both greater control over quality and increased profits.

  • Archive Titles

    Reading classics

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    There is a strong connection between inspirational books and inspirational architecture. Here are ten books that all self-respecting architects should have read or at least have on their shelf.

  • Archive Titles

    Liquid assets

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    The combination of water and light can be effective in revealing architectural surfaces and forms – but what are the main properties of water that designers need to understand, and what lighting techniques can they employ?

  • Archive Titles

    Lighting design software for architects

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Does an architect need specialty lighting design software? It really depends on what end result the designer is looking to achieve and, more importantly perhaps, on the kind of output the client both wants and understands. Lighting architect Devki RajGuru attempts to point designers in the right direction. ...

  • Archive Titles

    Arabian lights

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    A billowing, sail-shaped structure soaring 321 metres above the Arabian Gulf, the Burj Al Arab is a dramatic tribute to the region’s seafaring heritage. How, though, do you go about lighting the world’s tallest hotel to dramatic effect?

  • Archive Titles

    The Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Imperial College

    2000-01-01T00:00:00Z

    The Sir Alexander Fleming Building combines laboratories, lecture theatres and seminar rooms with a six-storey glazed atrium, where desk-bound researchers busy themselves under a mountain of books. Lighting such a diverse space presented several challenges for the design team at WSP.

  • Archive Titles

    Under-exposed

    1999-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Little-known designer George Walton straddled the 19th and 20th centuries, as he moved from Arts and Crafts to Modernism.

  • Archive Titles

    Switched on

    1999-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Lighting controls can produce a responsive lit environment that not only saves energy, but also meets end-user requirements. All too often, though, they don't work as intended.

  • Archive Titles

    Star turns

    1999-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Now that minimalism has gone mainstream, contemporary buildings are increasingly in demand as locations for films and TV programmes and as backdrops for advertising and fashion shoots.

  • Archive Titles

    Up to standard

    1999-12-01T00:00:00Z

    A draft standard for workplace lighting, European Commission proposals for a directive on lamp ballast energy efficiencies and revisions to Part L of the Building Regulations. Clearly, there’s a lot happening in the world of lighting standards and legislation.

  • Archive Titles

    Piano and the persistent priest

    1999-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Padre Gerardo, senior clergyman for the southern Italian town of San Giovanni Rotondo, took an unusual approach to convincing an architect to design the town’s new church. Padre Gerardo was so desperate to recruit Renzo Piano for the job that he sent the Genoa-based architect a fax every morning at ...