All Building Design articles in Archive Titles – Page 14
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Archive Titles
Memories of Jack Coia
I was surprised to find no response in your letters column last month to the article on Gillespie, Kidd and Coia in the November issue. I came across Jack Coia only once, when I was still pimply from school and an articled pupil in Preston in the early 1960s.
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Regions to be cheerful
One of the best bits of learning I have done in the past 12 months or so, during and since my year as president-elect, has been through visiting as many RIBA branches and regions in the UK outside London as possible.
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Brief encounter
Said Houli lives in north London but gets to Paris and Brussels more than most because he happens to be a Eurostar train driver. Hugh Pearman caught him at the depot and asked him what he thought of the new place
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Pardon me boy, is that the Chattanooga choo-choo?
After years of stagnation, transport museums are starting to receive some investment. The London Transport Museum has just reopened after a £23m facelift, while Zaha Hadid’s £74m Riverside Museum in Glasgow started on site in November.
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Bombay bravura
In 1880 a breathtaking watercolour by Axel Herman Haig of the proposed Victoria Terminus at Bombay was shown at the Royal Academy. When completed seven years later, the station triumphantly realized the bravura monumentality and riotous excess the drawing promised.
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Bauhaus primer
Say what you like about Middlesbrough – and people do – you can’t fault the ambition of its new modern art and design gallery, cheekily named MIMA.
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Bloggin’ Norman: London to Beijing and back.
RIBAJ editor Hugh Pearman has tracked Lord Foster since he was plain Norman. Now Foster has been in practice for 40 years and the pace is still quickening. Our Editor’s blog shows why.
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Architecture of fear
I hope I’m not alone in being appalled that the RIBA section of last month’s Journal should give space for an advocate of ‘Fortress Britain’ to exhort us to make our buildings ‘terrorist proof’.
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The roof now arriving on platform 5…
… is the delayed 450m long diagrid construction from Foster+Partners for Florence’s new railway station. The combination of bold design and complex geometry should have them gawping at arrivals.
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Within you without you
Dutch practice Biq effortlessly marries masonry and modernism in its Bluecoat centre extension. Oh, the relief from all that steel and glass.
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Twist and shout
The curves and warped planes of Liverpool’s first major conference centre, by Wilkinson Eyre, will give the city something to brag about.
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Things we said today
Didn’t go to the RIBA’s Paris conference, Entente Cordiale, at the end of October?
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We can work it out
The white space on Ben Johnson’s Liverpool Cityscape represents the fastest developing area of the city.
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Liverpool
I remember the culture shock of first encountering Liverpool at an RIBA conference at the end of the 1970s.
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Letters
What Dubai’s lackingDubai’s growing construction sector has attracted architects and architectural firms on a huge scale, and I have been in touch with the RIBA about setting up a local chapter.We would like to attract CPD presentations from UK firms to help members with their CPD efforts while outside the ...
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Magical mystery tour by Ken Quarryman
I’ve never met Dr Beatriz Garcia, but I think I’m in love.
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Step inside love
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (1880-1960) is perhaps best known today for his power stations at Battersea and Bankside.