More Opinion – Page 126
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Opinion
Is the drop in architecture applications a good thing?
Yes, says Neil Spiller, it gives us a chance to rethink architectural education; while Roger Zogolovitch argues that the profession always needs more new talent
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Opinion
Responsibility to staff is sign of good leadership
Management experts sometimes mention Ernest Shackleton as an outstanding example of a manager.
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Opinion
The economics of degree study
Jeremy Till has forseen this state of affairs (“Architecture applications drop 17.2%” bdonline January 5) and has busied himself trying to convince undergraduates that their degree is still useful even if they don’t become architects.
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Opinion
Isi Metzstein remembered
“We wanted to strengthen the vocabulary of modernism wherever it was necessary.”
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Opinion
2012: you heard it here first
Save yourself the bother of reading the news over the coming year, Boots has the highlights for you right now
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Opinion
End of a once-great practice
YRM’s heyday was long gone, so what does RMJM stand to gain from its purchase?
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Opinion
What’s wrong with managed decline?
As the Thatcher government archives show, the fortunes of cities are not easy to predict
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Opinion
Should we be listing more late 20th century buildings?
Yes, says Jack Hale, listing relies too much on economic viability; while Francis Terry says we should wait a century to see if they are truly great
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Opinion
Too overawed to criticise Rem’s Rothschild clichés
I was disappointed by the easy ride that your publication gave to OMA’s new Rothschild HQ in London (Buildings December 9).
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Opinion
Make an exhibit of Battersea
Many years ago, when I was a tutor at the Leicester School of Architecture, one of the design projects on which some of my students worked at my instigation was the conversion of the remains of the badly damaged Battersea Power Station (Debate December 9) into a major exhibition centre ...
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Opinion
Corbusier ceiling conundrum
Your article about Le Corbusier’s Marseille Unité d’Habitation (Inspiration December 2) says that “many of the 337 units are dual aspect… and most have double-height living rooms”.
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Opinion
Robots question is academic
The key question at the heart of the debate between practice and academia referred to in your article (“What have robots got to do with architecture?” News analysis December 16) is not “what is architecture?” but “what is an architect?”.
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Opinion
Does Rogers live up to his good words?
Richard Rogers’s oeuvre is a masterclass in separating principles from practice
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Opinion
Fortune favours the brave
This year’s World Architecture report makes a compelling case for UK firms to look abroad for opportunities
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Opinion
Should architects be looking forward to 2012?
Yes, says Kathryn Findlay, the Olympic site is a mine of pride and opportunity; but Noble Francis says the economic forecast leaves little room for optimism
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Opinion
Single minded housing
Google search reveals firm’s knowledge gap and why Sidell Gibson’s boss isn’t afraid to return to Libya
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Opinion
What links Brady’s winner to architecture?
The animation in Kibwe Tavares’s RIBA President’s Silver Medal-winning project Robots of Brixton is well done. But what does it have to do with architecture?
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Opinion
Healthy markets thrive on choice
Ellis Woodman missed a crucial insight from the Steen Eiler Rasmussen quote in his leader castigating architects for employing bold innovation in housing that then doesn’t get reflected in sale values.