All Building Design articles in Archive Titles – Page 106
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Seeing the light
You don't expect to find a fresh-faced, timber-lined concoction next to a Victorian church. But thanks to the enlightened congregation of Greenbank Parish Church in Edinburgh, Lee Boyd has created just that
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Touching up Lasdun's theatre
Sir Denys Lasdun was notoriously touchy about changes to his designs and, when it comes to the grade I-listed National Theatre (pictured), a few planners might agree with him.
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Off the grid
Exotic, radical, incongruous. The timber gridshell at the Weald and Downland Museum is all of the above – and a model of teamworking
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The workaholic life of Gio Ponti
Italian architect and designer Gio Ponti, who is celebrated in an exhibition at the Design Museum this month, was a workaholic. His day typically began at 5am with some letter writing – between 20 and 30 a day – and ended after dinner, when he sketched. He spent these days ...
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Fornasetti's new language
One of the most delightful shows at this year's Milan Furniture Fair was the new collection from Fornasetti designed by Nigel Coates. The architect says he became enchanted with Fornasetti's work, which plays with image and surface, and saw the commission as an opportunity to 'enhance the Fornasetti language' using ...
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Expand your horizons
Alexander Hall is an associate at Douglas Briggs Partnership in Bosham, outside Chichester. He took the History of English Domestic Architecture course at the Weald and Downland Open Air Museum.
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Tree root encroachment
Find out why a recent ruling is changing the law on tree root encroachment liabilities – and how to dodge the writs
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Upstart: Oona King on the new East End
Tower Hamlets is one of the poorest boroughs in the UK but it juxtaposes one of the richest, the City of London.
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Fancy dress
A bespoke cladding system will make your building stand out from the crowd, but it's definitely not the easy option. Here's how seven architects got a unique facade without reinventing the wheel
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Luck of the draw
Feeling left out of the digital era? Try the new touch-screen technology and software that lets you draw straight onto your computer screen and create instant 3D models
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Why urban design is politics
In all my 50 or so trips to Ulster, I have never heard local architects engage in such self-protective whingeing as: 'outside practices should not be allowed to take our work' or 'government should give me that new £100m hospital' – the kind of line trotted out by so-called champions ...
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Hopkins' Manchester gallery extension makes eye-popping debut
Artist Michael Craig-Martin clearly has no time for white-box galleries. His latest work explodes across the lime and magenta walls of the entrance hall in Michael Hopkins' £35m extension to Manchester Art Gallery, which opens this month.But the eye-popping installation to mark the reopening will not survive long. It is ...
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Death of a legend
As the world's population continues to spiral, high-rise cemeteries, or at least continental-style mausoleums, could be the next big thing in final resting places.
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The other gridshell is completed
As the Weald and Downland Conservation Workshop opens to the public, another, less heralded gridshell is also being completed in Scotland.
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Ideal Cities
Ideal CitiesRuth EatonThames and Hudson£39.95This fascinating book might be an interpreted as an Awful Warning to architects who rise above themselves – who come to think of themselves not just as useful craftsmen or even artists but as moulders of society's morals and mores. History is full of their proposals ...
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Brief encounter: Nitin Desai
Meet the celebrated Indian set designer who has just transformed Selfridges into a Bollywood spectacular.
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A wander in virtual Brick Lane
This seems to be east London's Brick Lane. There's a queue in the bagel shop and bananas swapping hands in the market.
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Superstar wanted to boost UK's sporting chances
A superstar architect is being sought to headline a high-profile conference addressing Britain's run of sports building flops.
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How to get a Brazilian body
Shard, cigar, erotic gherkin – these nicknames only thinly disguise what we are talking about with tall buildings.
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The beauty of Milton Keynes
A previous project took him into the sewers beneath Tokyo, so Japanese photographer Naoya Hatakeyama probably thought he had done enough slumming for the sake of his art.