More News – Page 1156
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NewsScotland's poor jobs outlook exaggerated, say Scottish architects
Leading industry figures in Scotland have poured cold water on reports that up to half of all architects north of the border could lose their jobs as the recession worsens.
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NewsLevete confirms Kaplicky job cuts
Future Systems staff working for the late Jan Kaplicky have been made redundant following talks with the Czech architect’s former partner Amanda Levete.
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NewsMaccreanor Lavington Canning Town project gets go-ahead
Newham Borough Council has approved the first phase of the Canning Town and Custom House regeneration project.
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Applications for architecture degrees rocket
The number of students applying to study architecture at undergraduate level has rocketed by almost 2000 in a year despite the onset of the recession.
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Record fine for misuse of 'architect' title
Acorn Building Design Associates of Mansfield fined over £7,000 by magistrates
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NewsGo-ahead for Carey Jones hotel
Carey Jones Architects’ £20 million office and hotel scheme in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, has won planning permission.
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Half of all small practices short of work
Survey by the RIBA reveals 47% of firms with 11 employees or fewer are “under-employed”
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NewsARM completes twin projects in Melbourne
Melbourne architect ARM has recently completed two neighbouring projects in its home city.
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NewsIslington offers hope for future of Lubetkin health centre
Islington Council has voted to refer the proposed sale of Berthold Lubetkin’s Finsbury Health Centre to health secretary Alan Johnson, raising hopes that the grade I listed building could yet be retained for healthcare use.
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NewsRIBA to push architects' role in green retrofitting programme
The RIBA wants to promote the role of architects in the government’s proposal to green all homes by 2030.
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NewsMonument reopens after £4.5m refurbishment
The Monument, one of the City of London’s most enduring landmarks, has reopened today after a £4.5 million refurbishment by Julian Harrap Architects.
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NewsWilkinson Eyre wins go-ahead for £35m Mary Rose museum
Wilkinson Eyre has won planning consent to build a £35 million museum to house the Mary Rose, the 16th century warship.
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NewsFoster's to make 300 to 400 redundancies
Foster & Partners shuts Berlin and Istanbul offices the day after it highlights profitability to staff
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NewsStonehenge win for Denton Corker Marshall
Denton Corker Marshall has landed the long-awaited contract to design Stonehenge visitors centre, BD can reveal.
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Aukett Fitzroy Robinson to restructure as UK market deteriorates
Aukett Fitzroy Robinson is to restructure and is poised to make cuts to its workforce, warning, in a statement to the City today, that the UK marketplace had further “deteriorated” in recent weeks.
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NewsBlears calls in Foster and HKR’s Ealing development
Communities secretary Hazel Blears has called in a £500 million project by HKR and Foster & Partners in west London just weeks after it was given the go-ahead by the local authority and London mayor Boris Johnson.
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Hammerson puts all new UK projects on hold
Property developer Hammerson has indefinitely postponed construction work on all its proposed UK projects including a Foreign Office Architects’ shopping centre scheme in Southampton after revealing pre-tax losses of £1.6 billion.
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NewsGrimshaw arts centre opens in Troy
Grimshaw Architects’ largest project to date in the US, the 20,550sq m Experimental Media & Performing Arts Centre, has opened.
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NewsGareth Hoskins’ grand villa sticks out in conservation area
Gareth Hoskins Architects has won planning permission for this 1,000sq m, six-bedroom private house in the Pollokshields conservation area of Glasgow.
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