More News – Page 1089
-
NewsAtkins set to poach talent from design-led practices
Large commercial firms are using recession as opportunity to broaden their offer
-
NewsNightingale wins £840m Glasgow hospital project (flythrough)
Nightingale Associates has beaten Keppie Architects and BDP to land its largest ever contract in its 20 year history, the £840 million Glasgow Southern General Hospital.
-
-
NewsCouncil rejects Make masterplan for Southall Gasworks site
Councillors have rejected Make’s masterplan for a 33ha mixed-use scheme on the old gasworks site in Southall, west London, voting against the advice of their planning officers.
-
NewsAndrew Doolan shortlist announced
Eleven projects have been shortlisted from 28 entries for British architecture’s richest prize, the Andrew Doolan Best Building in Scotland Award.
-
NewsTower landmark for new London suburb
Broadway Malyan and Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands are creating an entire new suburb for central London, complete with a skyscraper that will appear to rise out of the waters of a little-known tributary of the Thames
-
NewsGasworks Makeover
Make’s masterplan for a 33ha mixed development in west London will be considered for planning approval this week
-
NewsPostcards champion Manchester buildings
Some of Manchester’s most distinctive 20th-century buildings have been turned into postcards by campaigners determined to protect the city’s modern heritage
-
-
NewsSteelworks heritage evoked
Work on a £31 million sports centre designed by Populous in central Scotland has reached the halfway mark
-
NewsMurphy contemplates Edinburgh rethink
Richard Murphy is considering alternative schemes for Edinburgh’s Haymarket site after the Scottish government threw out his £250 million plan for a 17-storey hotel and office complex
-
NewsStudio Bednarski wins Danish bridge contest
London-based Studio Bednarski has beaten nine others including Zaha Hadid to design a 180m-long bridge in Denmark
-
NewsLegal action puts Hampton Court project on hold
Francis Terry hotel scheme would block historic views, say critics
-
News
Architecture graduate unemployment soars
Unemployment levels among architecture graduates have more than quadrupled in a year according to new figures released this week by the Higher Education Careers Services Unit (Hecsu)
-
NewsBDP admits 2010 will cap profits
BDP has admitted that repeating 2009’s set of recession-busting results will be harder to achieve next year when public spending tightens
-
News
Levete's Wapping wait
Amanda Levete’s redevelopment scheme for the News International site in Wapping, east London, has won the approval of Tower Hamlets planners
-
NewsBroughton museum goes ahead
Hugh Broughton Architects’ £2.7 million Maidstone Museum project (pictured) will go on site in the new year after being awarded a Heritage Lottery Fund grant of almost £2 million.
-
NewsFoster’s revised Shoreditch scheme wins council backing
Hackney Council in London has given the thumbs-up for Foster & Partners' £500 million Bishops Place regeneration scheme.
-
NewsHamiltons founder retires as chairman
Tim Hamilton has retired as chairman of Hamiltons, the practice he founded in 1966.
-
NewsFirm takes steps for wheelchairs
Matthew Lloyd Architects is working with the Corps of Royal Engineers to design temporary water- and solar-powered wheelchair lifts at the Duke of York steps in central London.







