All Building Design articles in Archive Titles – Page 112
-
Archive Titles
Atelier 5 banks Luxembourg's top prize
Swiss architect Atelier 5 has become the first foreign firm to win the Luxembourg Architecture Prize.
-
Archive Titles
Foster to plan US$3bn 'oasis' for Hong Kong
Foster and Partners has won the competition to masterplan the West Kowloon district of Hong Kong.
-
Archive Titles
The state we're in
'One world, one profession,' proclaimed AIA past president John Anderson last year – and it is certainly true that US practices are doing a substantial amount of international work.
-
Archive Titles
Poetry of structure
The late Eric de Maré believed Britain's industrial structures had a purity of form that belied their lowly status. His images of them helped create a 'functional tradition' for which he will be long remembered.
-
Archive Titles
Smooth operators
Imagine a vast, smooth concrete surface. Gorgeous, isn't it? Now look a little closer. Where did those marks come from, and what's gone wrong with the colour? You'll want to avoid those unsightly blemishes in real life. Read on to find out how …
-
Archive Titles
Material world
Finding the perfect material is a tricky job at the best of times and it doesn't help when your client wants a building stuffed with local products but the EU is insisting you treat all comers equally. Here's how a few projects handled the red tape.
-
Archive Titles
Home from home at The Lighthouse
Leaving a baronial home is usually a matter of moving down the social scale.
-
Archive Titles
Grand national
Dubliners are flocking to see the National Gallery of Ireland's latest exhibit. It's not a painting, but a spectacular new wing designed by Benson + Forsyth. So what does lie behind that sculptural stone facade?
-
Archive Titles
Saving grace
The Salvation Army does more than organise brass-band recitals. In east London, it is commissioning good architecture and providing flats for rough sleepers.
-
Archive Titles
Getting under Jørn's skin
When Richard Weston was asked to write the definitive book on Jørn Utzon, his response was none too positive.
-
Archive Titles
Foreign legion
UK practice getting you down? What you need is a domestic commission somewhere exotic. But before you jet off, take some advice from two architects who already have. First, Thomas Deckker in the suburbs of Brasília and in the related article at the bottom of the page, Seth Stein in ...
-
Archive Titles
Keeping it in the family
Architecture is chock full of partners who live and work together.
-
Archive Titles
The real deal
Everyone knows that the future is digital and that, up till now, computer programmers have been the chief architects of virtual space. But all that is about to change. Meet the young practices working on the outer limits.
-
Archive Titles
Principles - Data protection
Did you know that the Data Protection Act applies to your Christmas card list and the CCTV outside your office? Here's how to stay within the law …
-
Archive Titles
Craig Ellwood
Which significant 20th-century practitioner was born Johnnie Burke, renamed himself after his local liquor store, married four times and only officially became an architect after he ceased practice?
-
Archive Titles
Space-age cave lands on French hilltop
This space-age folly by Anglo-French architect dECOi is the latest part of an initiative to put the French town of Excideuil on the map.
-
Archive Titles
Never mind the buildings
What are you doing to celebrate the Queen's 50th year on the throne? Organising a street party?Unlikely. Designing a landmark building?Definitely not. In fact, no one is. We investigate apathy in the UK.
-
Archive Titles
Brief encounter - Roly Keating
BBC4, the new digital channel for the arts, is launched this month. Its controller tells RIBAJ about his plans to cover architecture.
-
Archive Titles
Take it to the bridge
Relieved Arup engineers will be cramming into the Royal Festival Hall this week to celebrate the repair of the unsteady, unready Millennium Bridge.
-
Archive Titles
Breaking the waves
Meanwhile, on a tiny island 20 minutes from Finland, London architect Seth Stein offers his wave-shaped take on the Scandinavian summerhouse.