All Building Design articles in Archive Titles – Page 77
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Gulliver's month
KPF's mini-metropolis opens in Tokyo, Francis Ford Coppola searches for Utopia and Gehry goes to the seaside
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Going upmarket
Valencia's neglected historic market gave London practice Borgos Dance its first big opportunity. A mixture of careful refurbishment and modern additions equips the building for a new life.
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In the lap of the gods
Out of an early morning mist swirl grotesque shapes – a giant head with gaping mouth and an inscription chillingly welcoming 'any philosophers'; a perilously leaning house resembling a film prop from the disturbed world of Dr Caligari; a gargantuan woman with an urn of flowers perched precariously on her ...
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Get the picture
Endlessly duplicated digital images - but where's the one you need for the job? Digital asset management software can bring order to the chaos. Overleaf, a professional digital camera on test.
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Get a life, man
Doesn't Philip Waddy's attitude to work (RIBA Journal Aug 2003 p46) highlight exactly why there are so few women in architecture?
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Select gathering
Organisers of this month's 100% Detail exhibition are determined to show a mix of products and manufacturers architects won't have seen before.
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Exercise your options
I read with interest your editorial about innovation in the July issue and the article in the RIBA's Practice section (page VI) on Dr William Fawcett's application of Options Theory.
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The Gehry effect
It's 100th the size of the Bilbao Guggenheim but Frank Gehry's first building in Britain has his name all over it.
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Driven to extinction
Some species of buildings are sturdy enough to survive in a changing habitat, but many that flourished in the early days of the automobile will soon face the bulldozers.
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Exert your democratic rites
Britain has 500-odd local councils, most of them housed inadequately. Labour's emphasis on localising democracy could see more continental style redevelopments, putting town halls at the centre of urban life.
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The Conder I knew
It is in extremely poor taste, especially in an obituary, to say the deceased was 'overshadowed by his flamboyant partner' (Obituary, August, pXV).
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Closed order
With no external elevations, Jamie Fobert's award-winning house in central London is a skilful manipulation of light and volume.
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Striking the right chord
A little addition to the feature on bats by Steve Markham (Practice, August, page II).
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Looks aren't everything
Many thanks for continuing with such interesting articles and absorbing reads in last month's RIBAJ.
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Up the villa
Jean Nouvel's Musée Gallo-Romain in Périgueux, south-west France, which opened last month appears, from a distance, to be barely more than a vast, wafer thin roof.
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Tall storey
Bill Mitchell's reference to Paul Newman's smouldering architect in The Towering Inferno (July, page 20) took me back to a night in 1975 in a cinema in Lusaka.
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Running to stand still
In-house architects and principals in partnership based in London are doing well, according to the RIBA's annual employment and earnings survey. But for others it's a question of working longer hours just to keep pace with inflation.
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Pyramid selling
Competing to design a $350m museum to sit at the foot of the Great Pyramid of Cheops would make most of us balk. But young Dublin practice Heneghan Peng got it all down on five sides of A3 – and won.
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Museum pieces
I am proud as a woman and an architect to see Zaha Hadid's Cincinnati museum. It is a great chance to think again about the role women play in architecture.
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What's yours is mined
Technologies are combining to create buildings that will be able read an enormous flood of information about you – and mine it so that it can respond to your every need.