More News – Page 1104
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TP Bennett's Trinity Hospice
TP Bennett has unveiled its designs for Trinity Hospice in South London.
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Allies & Morrison set to take over design of Noho Square development
Allies & Morrison is set to take over design work for Noho Square, the luxury mixed-use scheme in central London initially spearheaded by the Candy brothers.
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Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands wins competition to landscape £140 million Luxembourg tram scheme
Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands has won a major competition to refurbish public spaces along a new tram line in the city of Luxembourg.
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Go-ahead for Keith Williams' Canterbury theatre
Keith Williams Architects' redesign of Canterbury's Marlowe theatre has been given the go-ahead by the council.
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Learning and Skills Council's chief executive quits
Mark Haysom, the chief executive of the Learning and Skills Council, has resigned.
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Manchester students win Cisco sustainable communities competition
Two students from Manchester University’s School of Architecture have won the Cisco 2020 sustainable communities competition.
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The Gulf States Building Awards 2010
Celebrating excellence and achievement across the Gulf States
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Herzog & de Meuron's Portsmouth stadium put on ice
Herzog & de Meuron’s ambitious design for a 45,000-seat stadium for Portsmouth Football Club have been put on hold, the club has announced.
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Wembley architects fear ‘ruinous cost’ of ruling
Foster’s and HOK Sport face £5m bill as judge orders them to answer design questions
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Architect job losses up by 760%
The rate at which architects are joining the dole has accelerated to a year-on-year increase of 760%, it has emerged.
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Atkins warns LSC delay could cost hundreds of jobs
Hundreds of architectural and engineering jobs could be lost unless urgent action tackles the stalled Learning and Skills Council college-building programme, a major design firm has warned.
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Driftwood design chosen for AA Pavilion
A curving, doughnut-like timber structure is to occupy London’s Bedford Square this summer after being selected as the winning student design in the AA’s annual pavilion competition.
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Concern as English Heritage cites Wikipedia in listing submission
Heritage body included user-edited website in key listing submission to government
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Hadid: too many teams will produce a mediocre Paris
Zaha Hadid has hit out at French president Nicolas Sarkozy’s competition to rethink Paris, claiming that seeking advice from 10 teams of multidisciplinary consultants and architects is set to produce a “mediocre” city.
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Adjaye's Wakefield market under fire
Wakefield Council insisted this week it had no plans to knock down a controversial David Adjaye-designed market hall, despite calls for its demolition from a council watchdog
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Tube cost threat to Vauxhall cluster
Plans to see London’s Vauxhall area emerge as a new cluster of skyscrapers could be threatened by a proposed development tax.
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Hakes’ bridge design takes it to Moscow
London practice Hakes Associates has won the competition to design a £75 million bridge in Moscow which will link the main part of the city with a new town being built on its western outskirts.
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McChesney’s black gloss house has conservation area go-ahead
McChesney Architects has won permission for a controversial modular black house in the heart of a south-east London conservation area.
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Kazakhstan beckons for jobless architects
Highly qualified architects who have been made redundant are having to take jobs in “unusual” locations including Kazakhstan, Armenia, Libya and Nigeria, recruitment experts claim.