All Building Design articles in Archive Titles – Page 115
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Archive Titles
Getting it together
Teamworking tools may be the height of fashion but they never really reflected the nature of the design process. Until now. Planweaver analyses the flow of information so architects can identify key tasks and the areas where they most need help.
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Archive Titles
Fruit of the forest
In 1960, Peter Foggo and David Thomas created a simple timber house in the Sussex woods. Forty years on, Thomas and Foggo Associates' new wing has enhanced its charms.
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RIBA's first 'regional tsar' starts work
The RIBA has responded to criticism that it is remote from the regions by creating a new post: head of the regional network.
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Life inside will drive you mad
Tough as the conditions may be for the al-Qaida prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, it is nothing compared to the life endured by inmates of Pentonville Prison when it opened in 1842.
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Teen dream
When groups of bored east London teenagers were asked what inspired them, they said technology and modern architecture. This became the brief for a new type of youth centre by van Heyningen and Haward.
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Upstart: Lynne Walker on the RSC plan to destroy a landmark
The Royal Shakespeare Company's plan to demolish Elisabeth Scott's theatre fills many architects with disbelief.
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Crossing over
A new CABE report has slated the design quality of schools built under the PFI. But like it or not, the initiative is here to stay. So architects and clients must find a way to get it right. Here's how they can.
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Order in court
'Discipline, rigour and knowing when to hold back'. That's the Maguire & Co philosophy. For its Oxford student houses, this meant brick, a formal courtyard and a strong sense of order.
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The real cost of PII cover
The current spat between the RIBA and ARB over the latter's decision to set the minimum level of professional indemnity insurance cover at £250,000 highlights the importance of maintaining 'economic' PII premiums – at whatever level the cover is required.Three factors tend to generate higher premiums. First, inappropriate and inflated ...
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DIY magazine cleans up
Although you can buy it in the RIBA bookshop, you might not recognise Sexymachinery as an architectural magazine.
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Claus en Kaan: Building
Claus en Kaan: BuildingHans IbelingsNAi Publishers£49The work of Felix Claus and Kees Kaan, in obvious contrast to that of so many of their Dutch contemporaries, is sober and restrained, more concerned with the immanent power of building than with the rhetoric of the architectural gesture. Hence the title of this ...
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Brief encounter: Ben Johnson
Meet the artist who has spent the past 30 years reinterpreting the work of contemporary architects.
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Reyner Banham
With the current wave of reappraisals of the Independent Group, this study of Reyner Banham's writings is timely.
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Swiss architecture's secret weapon comes to London
Quite why Swiss architecture is in vogue at the moment is the subject of much debate.
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Should conservation architects have to be registered? - For
Accreditation is necessary because of widespread ignorance of conservation techniques.
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Architect wanted for new Egyptian wonder at Giza
Open competitions being a bit of a rarity these days, it will be no surprise if there is huge interest in the recently announced competition to design a 'Grand Egyptian Museum' near the pyramids at Giza.The competition process is likely to be fraught – the pyramids are a world ...
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Ando makes his UK debut with Manchester pavilion
International star Tadao Ando has completed his first UK building – a modest pavilion in Manchester's Piccadilly Gardens.
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Should conservation architects have to be registered? - Against
Julian Harrap argues that a register would diminish the role of architects in conservation projects.
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Space station
Inchon airport's Transportation Centre wouldn't look out of place in a sci-fi movie but its architect Terry Farrell says it's more like a 19th-century train station. In fact, it's a synthesis of cladding technology and organic forms and a symbol of the new South Korea.
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Wright's Tokyo school saved
A Frank Lloyd Wright landmark threatened with demolition a few years ago has just been restored in a ¥765m (US$6m) project.