More News – Page 996
-
News
US survey shows hopes of recovery
Latest results from the American Institute of Architects monthly billings index have bolstered hopes of a recovery for the profession in the US.
-
News
UK practice lands China role
Milton Keynes practice David Lock Associates is the only UK firm invited to work on plans to build a new town in the middle of China.
-
News
Prix's European Central Bank rises as Euro falls
As the Euro continues to fall, the new £740 million European Central Bank building in Frankfurt, Germany, by Wolf D. Prix’s practice Coop Himmelblau has begun to rise out of the ground.
-
News
Qatari Diar MD had doubts from start about Rogers scheme
The managing director of Qatari Diar, one of the companies behind the proposed redevelopment of Chelsea Barracks, said he had concerns from the start that the scheme by Rogers Stirk Harbour did not represent value for money.
-
News
Cabe and EH and Tate all face cuts this year
Cabe, English Heritage and the Tate Gallery are being asked to cut a combined £7 million from their budgets this year as part of the government’s £6.2 billion in spending cuts.
-
News
Six shortlisted to reclad St Thomas' Hospital tower
AHMM, Grimshaw and Hopkins are among six teams shortlisted for a second RIBA competition for Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust.
-
News
Dan Brill's surfers' bridge is people's choice in California
Hampshire practice Dan Brill Architects has won a People’s Choice award in an international bridge competition on America’s west coast.
-
News
Lubetkin health centre's future will be decided in July
The health authority in charge of Lubetkin’s threatened Finsbury Health Centre is expected to make a decision on its future in July.
-
News
Aberdeen arts centre commissioner loses her job
The client on Brisac Gonzalez’s scheme for an arts centre in Aberdeen has lost her job after the project was scrapped in favour of a rival.
-
News
Kent school building programme in limbo as major cuts loom
Architects await government decision on future of £1.2bn second phase.
-
News
Nomination shortfall foils Oldham’s bid for president
Low pay candidate George Oldham has failed in his eleventh hour bid to become the next president of the RIBA.
-
News
Earls Court to receive Olympic makeover
Populous and Allies & Morrison are set to transform Earls Court Exhibition Centre into a temporary Olympic venue
-
News
Scots given reassurance in Aberdeen contest row
Scottish architects will be given every chance to design a controversial mixed-use scheme in Aberdeen under an international design competition, its backers have insisted
-
News
Scotland is braced for bad times
The RIAS met in Stirling last week, amid fears that low support for the Conservatives could lead to Scotland being hit hardest by the new government’s spending cuts
-
News
Guggenheim restaurant wins
New York-based architect Andre Kikoski has won the James Beard Foundation award for Outstanding Restaurant Design for his design of The Wright restaurant in the Guggenheim Museum
-
News
BD launches an opinion poll on the three RIBA presidential candidates.
We are giving you the chance to show your support for the person you want to see as the next president of the RIBA.
-
News
Shock announcement sees Penrose replacing Vaizey as architecture minister
The DCMS yesterday performed an extraordinary U-turn by announcing that Ed Vaizey will not serve as architecture minister.
-
News
Guy Hollaway ahead of the curve with Kent harbourside restaurant
Local practice Guy Hollaway Architects has won planning approval for a new £2 million seafood restaurant in Folkestone.
-
News
Glenn Howells hired to ‘shift around’ Birmingham Eastside site
Glenn Howells Architects has been hired to redraw plans for one of the UK’s biggest regeneration zones, Eastside in Birmingham, following news that the government plans to build a high speed rail link through it.
-
News
Bomber Command memorial approved
Liam O’Connor’s £3.5 million memorial to the airmen of Bomber Command who died during the second world war has been granted planning consent