All Archive Titles articles – Page 180
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Archive Titles
Trail blazer
The Napper Partnership's footbridge at Hadrian's Wall, winner of an RFAC award, floats over the river in the footsteps of the Roman crossing.
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Archive Titles
Swimming against the tide
Stainless steel pools are leakproof, quick to build and virtually maintenance-free. Yet they are still on the margins of a market dominated by concrete and tiles.
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Ten years on
How convenient that the International Academy of Architecture (IAA) chose to launch its quarterly magazine World Architecture in 1989, giving us the chance to celebrate our tenth anniversary in conjunction with a retrospective on international architecture of the 1990s. Most publishers would avoid launching a new title in the grip ...
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Archive Titles
Shooting stars
Murray Grigor, whose latest film is about Glasgow architect Alexander 'Greek' Thomson, is obsessed with bringing architecture to a new audience, and has just become the first film-maker to be made an honorary fellow of the RIBA.
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Split personality
Greenhill Jenner Architects' teaching and administration centre for the campus of the south London Bethlem hospital uses material and colour to differentiate between function.
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Martin Pawley
During his time as editor (1992-96) Martin Pawley challenged the conventional art historical analysis of the built environment, and pioneered the transformation of World Architecture into “the business magazine for the global architect”. He still airs his views in Polemic every issue.
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Archive Titles
The London Rich
The London RichPeter ThoroldViking£25The rich, whether in the Testaments or the tabloids, have always had a bad press. Maybe it is because, like the defeated, they do not write the books to give their side of the story. Maybe they deserve the calumny, but what they do not deserve is ...
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Archive Titles
Saltdean Lido
Thirties lidos are enjoying a new audience of devotees who appreciate their architecture if not the spartan conditions.
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Archive Titles
Lofty ideals
The aesthetics and history of loft living, plus a polemic for combining architecture with a study of nature, and a history of London's rich.
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Archive Titles
Metal hits the roof
Many of the 1990s' most acclaimed projects owe their signatures to either exotic alloys such as titanium, or mass-produced materials like aluminium and steel. With sales of metal roofing systems at 25 times their 1960 level, this report asks whether the metal roof is poised to be the next big ...
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Archive Titles
Game plan
Left to its own devices Rare, one of the most successful computer games companies in the world, would have chosen a traditional building – ideally a stately home – for its new headquarters. Feilden Clegg had to persuade it otherwise.
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Fortune telling
Size matters, according to this year's employment and earnings survey, which shows that more architects are employed in large firms and it is this group that is likely to earn more.Sole principals and partners in small firms are paying dearly for the freedom that comes with running their own businesses. ...
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Expert opinion
Dr John Connaughton, a partner in Davis Langdon Consultancy and currently chairman of the Construction Industry Council Innovation and Research Committee, sheds some light on this year's findings.
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Home economics
Walter Menteth Architects has combined a 'polemical exercise in cheap housing' with an experiment with materials – both natural and man-made – to produce an abstract, self-contained house in South London.
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Archive Titles
The Early Years
From 1989 to 1995 the work of IAA (International Academy of Architecture) masters including Jean Nouvel, was published alongside essays from academics and architects.
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Archive Titles
Will it be the past or the future for Dublin?
When it comes to economic miracles, size doesn’t count. For years Germany was Europe’s wunderland, but only until reunification, when its size increased by a third. The same happened in East Asia, where Japan held the lead until the 1990s crash, when it turned out that little Taiwan had been ...
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Archive Titles
Living his dream
Two years after the opening of Bilbao’s Guggenheim museum Frank Gehry is still architecture’s hottest property, captivating critics and public alike – including WA’s anniversary jury. The recipient of last year’s AIA Gold Medal, and the latest American architect (since Louis Kahn) to be hailed a creative genius, Gehry has ...
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Archive Titles
Piping cool
Fitzroy Robinson is using a pioneering technique that takes the lessons learned from passive ventilation a step further. The result is an energy-efficient solution to keep temperatures comfortable at an office building in Basildon.
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Archive Titles
Ch-ch-ch-ch- changes
How has the practice of architecture changed in the ten years since World Architecture was launched? In conversation with Arthur Gensler, Nicholas Grimshaw and Ivor Daniel and Jacques Glanville of Stauch Vorster, World Architecture finds out how architects have adapted to a decade of political and economic turmoil.