More News – Page 1010
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Anish Kapoor unveils Olympic sculpture
Anish Kapoor has unveiled London’s latest landmark: a 115m-high piece of public art destined for the Olympic Park.
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Caruso St John submits long-awaited Tate Britain plans
The Tate has submitted a planning application to Westminster City Council to revamp its original Tate Britain gallery at Pimlico in London.
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Spratley set to launch boathouse
Work is due to start on Spratley Studios’ £1.2 million boathouse for Oxford Brookes University this May.
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HCA's proposed design standards divide profession
Architects have given a mixed reaction to proposals for a unified set of minimum housing design standards from the Homes & Communities Agency.The HCA has given the industry until June 17th to respond to its ‘core standards’ proposal, which as BD predicted includes meeting at least 14 out of 20 ...
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Students invited to join with hundreds of others at Manchester event
30th European Architecture Students Asembly to be held in the UK this summer
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Bolles & Wilson reveals industrial 'tea house'
Bolles & Wilson has designed an industrial warehouse building inspired by a Japanese tea house and complete with a rooftop reflecting pool.
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RIBA London Awards shortlist unveiled
The RIBA London Awards shortlist has been unveiled, featuring 66 projects including MUMA’s Medieval & Renaissance Galleries and Wilkinson Eyre’s Ceramics Galleries Bridge, both at the Victoria & Albert Museum.
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Scotland takes up Kickstart idea
The Scottish government has set up its version of the Kickstart programme to get work going again on mothballed housing sites.
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Make's landmark London tower knocked back by planning authority
Lambeth rejects skyscraper proposal following criticism from English Heritage
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Knight's Viennese Bridge
Knight Architects along with German firm Knippers Helbig has won an international competition for a new footbridge in the centre of the Austrian capital Vienna.
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Archial looks to gobble up other firms despite making a loss in 2009
Archial is looking at renewing its acquisition of other practices this year and has confirmed it is in advanced discussions with a number of potential firms.
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Bennetts' masterplan boost
Bennetts Associates’ proposal to re-locate 5,000 civil servants outside of London has been boosted by a new independent report.
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Olympic Stadium rises to its full height
The Olympic Stadium by Populous is on track to be completed next summer, the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has announced.
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Penoyre & Prasad’s 2012 health centre given the green light
Penoyre & Prasad’s Olympic health centre in the London 2012 Athletes’ Village has won planning permission.
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Sanaa wins the Pritzker
Japanese architects Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, who work together as Sanaa, have been announced as the recipients of the 2010 Pritzker Prize.
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Leading Irish firm Murray O Laoire goes bust
Irish practice Murray O Laoire has gone into liquidation, putting more than 100 jobs at risk.
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Make’s half-built Cube development hit as developer goes into administration
The developer on The Cube, a major mixed-use tower designed by Make in Birmingham, has gone into administration.
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Shanghai 2010 Expo pavilions near completion
As series of spectacular pavilions is taking shape in Shanghai for the 2010 expo, and Thomas Heatherwick’s design for the UK is no exception, but what message is it sending out?
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Noise fears could curtail landmark tower’s turbines
Elephant & Castle skyscraper’s signature element set to be turned off during the night
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Wandering Scots inspire Jencks’ Fife park project
Critic and architectural theorist Charles Jencks is to transform the blighted site of a spent Scottish coal mine into a fanciful landscape of stepped hillsides and artificial lochs