More News – Page 1040
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NewsGuggenheim 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
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NewsBD 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.
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NewsShock 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.
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NewsGuy 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.
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NewsGlenn 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.
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NewsBomber 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
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NewsLondon on display
Wilkinson Eyre’s £20 million redevelopment of the Museum of London opens next Friday with 25% more space and a glass frontage that allows passers-by to see in to Moya & Partners’ 1976 landmark for the first time
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Sheffield tests tactile city maps
A map designed to help blind and visually impaired people get around cities is being trialled in Sheffield
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Student wins AF travel bursary
Manchester School of Architecture student Nandi Marshal Han has won this year’s student travel award organised by the Architecture Foundation
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Architect fined for felling trees
A Belfast architect has been fined £800 for illegally removing trees from the site of a luxury house he was building
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NewsHigh Court rejects Save's Lancaster brewery test case
An attempt by Save Britain’s Heritage to set a legal precedent protecting period buildings from demolition has been thrown out by the High Court
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NewsRogers ‘precious’ over Chelsea plan
The High Court heard claims this week that Rogers Stirk Harbour was “precious” when London mayor Boris Johnson requested design changes be made to its ill-fated Chelsea Barracks scheme.
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NewsDownturn hits RIBA regional winners list
Chipperfield stands out in race for Stirling as museums dominate, according to Ellis Woodman.
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NewsStirling judging panel announced
The judges for this year’s RIBA Stirling Prize have been announced
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NewsGreen light for slavery museum expansion
Austin-Smith: Lord’s £6 million extension to the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool has been granted planning permission.
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NewsOlympic construction races towards next year's finish
The Olympic Delivery Authority has released new images of construction progress on the Olympic site in east London including the stadium and aquatics centre.
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NewsFoster designs health campus for Didsbury
Norman Foster has designed his second hospital, a 600-patient “health campus” in Didsbury, Manchester.
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NewsRIBA 2010 regional award winners announced
Each year the RIBA awards buildings that have high architectural standards and make a substantial contribution to the local environment. For 2010, 102 buildings have been awarded.
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NewsBarracks developer tells of Charles opposition
Property developer Christian Candy gave a colourful account yesterday of why he thought the Prince of Wales had scuppered his scheme for the redevelopment of the prestigious Chelsea Barracks site in London.







