More Opinion – Page 112
-
Opinion
An endangered species?
What’s the point in spending up to 10 years, and thousands in fees, training to be an architect to earn an average salary of £41,000?
-
Opinion
Schools need creative dissent
Stephen Bates rightly draws attention to the exodus of teachers from the UK (Debate July 27), but the situation is not new.
-
Opinion
Sinking feeling at Aquatics Centre
Having applied for a range of Olympic tickets, I was delighted to report our only success to my 13- year-old grandson in June 2011: seats for the women’s synchronised diving on July 31.
-
Opinion
Brady’s Olympic protest is far too little too late
Locog’s ban on marketing may be ludicrous. But why is the RIBA’s only response a publicity stunt when the Games are half over?
-
Opinion
Celebrating the architects of the Olympics - BD's first ever app only edition
This week BD launches its first ever app-only weekly edition to shine a spotlight on the architects who have been frozen out by the Olympics marketing rules
-
Opinion
The flaming dandelion
By reinventing the question, Thomas Heatherwick has shown that the Olympic cauldron can be more than a bowl of fire on a stick
-
Opinion
Flying the flag for great British design
The Olympics tick a lot of boxes but it doesn’t represent the bulk of architects’ work
-
Opinion
Let’s bang the drum for round architecture
The Tate Tanks are the latest in a series of impressive circular structures
-
Opinion
Are UK schools losing their best teachers?
Yes, says Stephen Bates, there are better opportunities overseas; while Robert Mull says UK education is hard to beat
-
Opinion
A tight squeeze at the Velodrome
Making room at the Velodrome, Peter Murray’s guerrilla marketing coup and the Carbuncle Cup shortlist
-
Opinion
No justification for memorial
I do not accept Bryan Avery’s point, nor his accusation (Letters July 20).
-
Opinion
Student numbers not surprising
The situation is nowhere near as significant as the headline “Student numbers down” suggests (News July 13).
-
Opinion
What's the use of listed buildings?
The use of the South Bank Centre is not the question (Debate July 20), it is the quality and relevance of the building to its time, in this case the 1960s, and the importance of its designers in that period.
-
Opinion
Elitism is taking toll on profession
I couldn’t agree more with Wouter Vanstiphout (Opinion July 20).
-
Opinion
Not such a Stirling effort
As the shortlist for the Stirling Prize is released, I couldn’t help but be disappointed once again.
-
Opinion
Lubetkin’s ideals have been replaced by extravagance
With more UK architects working abroad, the Lubetkin Prize should be growing in significance but at what cost to its original values?
-
Opinion
The Stirling Prize: artificial austerity
This year’s shortlist reveals a fetish for the neo-modern slickness of concrete, glass and steel – but it is the building that pays attention to people that should win
-
Opinion
How nice to hear Pouillon’s name
Adam Khan is to be applauded for reviving interest in Fernand Pouillon.
-
Opinion
Architects are prostitutes, says Will Self
Well, of course architects are prostitutes (“Top architects lack principles, says Will Self”, News July 13)
-
Opinion
Conservation views are too far away from reality
Thank you for publishing Peter Howell’s letter regarding the rejection of a planning application for a comparatively small and seemingly quite inoffensive extension to a house in the conservation area of Moseley.