More News – Page 998
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Sergison Bates wins housing scheme in Vienna
Sergison Bates has won a role on a housing scheme in Vienna being planned for a former railway yard close to the centre of the Austrian capital.
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Nightingale owner fails to find a buyer for the practice
The company that owns Nightingale has said it has not yet found a buyer for the business it put up for sale in March.
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Luder to stand for RIBA Council in protest at ‘staff taking sides’
Former RIBA president Owen Luder has announced he will stand for election to the institute’s national council because senior staff are riding roughshod over the wishes of elected officials.
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HCA cuts directors in bid to save £2m a year
The Homes & Communities Agency today announced a number of measures to cut its costs ahead of an expected clampdown on quangos by the new government.
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Qatari Diar buckled under prince’s criticism, court hears as £81m Chelsea Barracks action begins
Prince Charles’s ”notorious opposition” to modern architecture led to an £81 million claim in the High Court.
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Heatherwick routemaster revealed as Foster told to move along please
Heatherwick Studio has created a 21st century alternative to London’s iconic Routemaster bus.
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Viñoly to design £1bn scheme for Manchester City
Rafael Viñoly is set to design a £1 billion sports and leisure complex for the richest football club in the world – Manchester City.The 81ha Eastlands site, previously earmarked for one of the government’s super casinos, is expected to be transformed to include a £5 million training complex, as well ...
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Aukett says losses less severe than expected
Aukett Fitzroy Robinson has said that first half losses will be better than expected.
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Alastair Parvin and Lukas Barry win Greenpeace Heathrow competition
A design by London architects Alastair Parvin and Lukas Barry has won a Greenpeace competition to build an impregnable fortress on the site of the ill-fated third runway at Heathrow Airport.
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Ed Vaizey appointed architecture minister
Ed Vaizey has been appointed architecture minister, taking over from the previous Labour incumbent Margaret Hodge.
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Feilden Clegg Bradley 116m-high beacon commemorates Battle of Britain
Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios has completed early designs for a monument to rival the scale of the Angel of the North – a north London tribute to the Battle of Britain.
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Cabe backs Studio RHE’s east London tower
Cabe has given a cautious thumbs-up to Studio RHE’s plans for a striking 24-storey tower in east London.
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Penoyre & Prasad creates housing for the Orthodox Jewish community
Penoyre & Prasad’s The Gardens is a development of 26 homes for the Agudas Israel Housing Association in Stamford Hill, north London.
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Scottish Enterprise insists on an 'international winner'
The RIAS has accused the public backers of a controversial Aberdeen scheme of freezing out Scottish design talent.
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Curtain up on National Theatre proposals
Haworth Tompkins has unveiled detailed proposals for its £50 million transformation of Denys Lasdun’s National Theatre, ahead of a planning submission expected next month.
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Nord's pottery regeneration goes ahead
Despite the withdrawal of Urban Splash from the project, the regeneration of the Canal Quarter in Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, is moving forward with Nord winning outline planning consent for 252 units.
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Manchester towers get a makeover by architect 2e
Four towers on the edge of Manchester’s city centre are being transformed in a £7m over cladding and refurbishment project commissioned by City South Manchester Housing Trust.
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Rogers Stirk Harbour looks abroad to reverse profit slump
Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners has unveiled details of new overseas projects, claiming it is emerging from a slump that saw profits tumbling more than two-thirds last year
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Foster's waxes historical in Racine
The American company behind Toilet Duck and Mr Muscle has opened a Foster & Partners-designed hall.