More News – Page 1117
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Studio Egret West bid wins science park
Studio Egret West has beaten Make, BDP and Associated Architects to oversee the redevelopment of Pebble Mill, the historic former Midlands base of the BBC.
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Foster’s denies Red October is shelved
Foster & Partners has played down reports that the Red October island project in Moscow, which also involves Jean Nouvel and six other firms, has been shelved.
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Judicial review backs government
Objectors to one of the proposed eco-towns have failed in their bid to get the government’s consultation declared unlawful.
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Allies & Morrison offices approved
Allies & Morrison’s £100 million office scheme in King’s Cross has been approved for planning by the London Borough of Camden.
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Docklands designer Price dies
David Price, architect, urban designer and former partner of Gordon Cullen, has died at the age of 54.
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New look News Junkie and competitions directory launched
Bdonline has launched two new web services this week — an online directory of architecture competitions and a new-look News Junkie blog bringing you a selection of the best architecture stories elsewhere on the web.
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Erick van Egeraat files for insolvency
International success story succumbs to credit crunch and Russian market
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DLA Architecture’s mixed-use Eltham scheme is far from plain
DLA Architecture has won planning permission on appeal for The Grove, this seven-storey, mixed-use scheme in Eltham, south-east London, following a 20-month wrangle with Greenwich Council.
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Fletcher Priest Architects’ Watermark Place nears completion
Work is nearing completion on Fletcher Priest Architects’ Watermark Place, its 50,000sq m office and retail scheme on the north bank of the Thames close to St Paul’s Cathedral in central London.
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Security minister Adam West urges architects to ‘design out’ terrorism
Security minister Alan West has called on architects and planners to join the government in its fight against terrorism.
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Give Cabe power to call in schemes, says review
Housebuilders fear another hurdle as design watchdog receives glowing performance review
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Free work devalues profession, says RIBA
The RIBA has issued a warning against architects offering work for free during the recession, an approach it claims will devalue the entire profession.
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Three shortlisted for Waterloo Road development
Three practices are competing to design a square on London’s South Bank. Proposals by DSDHA, Edaw and Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands were revealed this week ahead of a public consultation.
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Is moving to the USA an option for architects?
With billions of new investment promised by President Obama, is moving to the States the way for architects to find work?
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Foundation stone laid for Herzog & de Meuron’s Roche £153 million R&D centre in Basel
The foundation stone has been laid on Herzog & de Meuron’s £153 million research and development building for Roche Basel in Switzerland.
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Bio-domes set to provide animal ark at Chester Zoo
This series of bio-domes, designed by Proctor and Matthews, are part of an ambition £225 million expansion plan by Chester Zoo to become the largest animal attraction of its kind in Europe.
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The Public: Arts Council rejects calls for additional funding
The Public arts gallery in West Bromwich, designed by Will Alsop, is in serious jeopardy after Arts Council England rejected a request for additional funding.
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Heneghan Peng’s Giant’s Causeway visitor centre wins go-ahead
Northern Ireland's environment minister Sammy Wilson has granted planning permission for Heneghan Peng's long-awaited visitor centre for the Giant's Causeway.