More News – Page 1098
-
News
Nightingale wins second hospital
Nightingale Associates has won the contract to design a £150 million children’s hospital in Edinburgh. It beat BDP, Anshen & Allen, Hypostyle Architects and Keppie.
-
News
Go-ahead for controversial Bristol maths department
Bristol University has won planning permission for a controversial £80 million maths and biological sciences development by Sheppard Robson, despite opposition from local groups and English Heritage.
-
News
Make's Nine Elms towers put on hold by recession
Make’s plans for a 30-storey complex of curving towers close to London’s Battersea Power Station have stalled just weeks after they were first unveiled.
-
News
Peter Zumthor’s Devon holiday house will be his first UK project
This year’s Pritzker prize winner Peter Zumthor is designing his first project in the UK, a residential building in Devon which will be part of the forthcoming Living Architecture project.
-
News
Outer London Summit – 11th June 2009
A one-day conference exploring the potential of London's outer boroughs by identifying key development and regeneration opportunities.
-
News
Green light for Studio Egret West's Clapham One scheme
Studio Egret West announced a brace of deals this week after schemes in London and Kent received the all clear from council planners.
-
News
Cabe calls for simplification of Oxfordshire waste facility design
Cabe has called on Kent-based Architecture & Planning Solutions to rethink its design approach to a new waste and recycling facility in Oxfordshire.
-
News
Adjaye to design Washington's African American History museum
Britain’s David Adjaye has been named as part of the competition-winning team selected to design the prestigious National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC.
-
News
Arad's Médiacité on site
Ron Arad Associates has released new images of its Médiacité shopping centre project in Liège, Belgium.
-
News
Peter Zumthor wins Pritzker Prize
Swiss architect Peter Zumthor has won the 2009 Pritzker Prize, architecture's most prestigious award.
-
News
Architecture minister Follett lists two 20th Century buildings
Barbara Follett lists school and railway station at Grade II.
-
News
Work to part-pedestrianise Oxford Circus begins (video)
Work on an experimental scheme to semi-pedestrianise Oxford Circus, one of central London’s busiest junctions, begins this week.
-
News
Sustainability Now virtual event details revealed
New details and information on the upcoming Sustainability Now virtual event, which takes place next month on 13 and 14 May.
-
News
CF Møller dumped from Maritime Museum project
Purcell Miller Tritton replaces concept architect on Greenwich landmark scheme
-
News
Plan for sports stadium on Maze Prison site dropped
A controversial proposal for a multi-sport stadium on the site of Belfast’s Maze Prison has been scrapped.
-
News
Is the RIBA right to invite Prince Charles to speak?
Yes, the prince has been good for architecture, says Robert Adam; no, counters Jack Pringle, he has abused his regal celebrity to promote his uninformed views
-
News
Architect erased from Arb register
Architect Gillian Beckingham was removed from the Arb register on Tuesday, almost three years after she was convicted of a breach of health and safety regulations in a case which involved the deaths of at least five people from Legionnaires’ disease.
-
News
Grimshaw reveals its Coney Island amphitheatre
Grimshaw Architects has unveiled images of its £32 million amphitheatre for Coney Island, New York.
-
News
Arb releases guidance as bankruptcy numbers rise
The Architects’ Registration Board has issued new guidance for architects worried about individual and company insolvency after a near-doubling in personal bankruptcies in the profession
-
News
Bat house approved
Architectural Association students Jorgen Tandberg and Yo Murata have won planning permission for a home for bats at the London Wetland Centre at Barnes, south-west London.