More Opinion – Page 130
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Opinion
Too many Cooks?
One of the more unusual items to land in Boots’ inbox this week was from the Australian arts collective The Adam and Eve Projects
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Opinion
Socks appeal
Rem Koolhaas and his fellow OMA partners subjected themselves to two hours of group psychoanalysis in front of a sold-out audience at the Barbican on Tuesday.
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Opinion
The Di is cast
Headhunters working for Design Council Cabe have been asked to find “a go-getting and entrepreneurial” replacement for Di Haigh who announced her resignation as director of the organisation this week.
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Opinion
Should protesters have the right to occupy public space?
Yes, says Anna Minton, though this protest illustrates the City’s lack of public space; while Tom Ironside says demonstrations shouldn’t prevent others from going about their business
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Opinion
Ambassadors for UK design
Economising on the embassy programme could prove to be an expensive mistake
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Opinion
The darker side of King’s Cross
Richard Wentworth (Buildings October 21) says the King’s Cross granary building “has scrubbed up well”.
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Opinion
Good cities value the everyday
I agree with Owen Hatherley (Opinion October 21) that the standard of everyday buildings defines the architecture of the age. I wish I understood, however, why architects seem to have so little admiration for the everyday
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Opinion
Scotland: it’s starting to irritate me
As the shift to independence gathers pace, all sides are using architecture as a political tool
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Opinion
Mainstream buildings do not need design reviews
The problems with design reviews go deeper than those mentioned in your leader (October 21). Very few new buildings could be scrutinised in this labour-intensive way — all conceivable paymasters are skint. But even if widespread design review could somehow be afforded, it still isn’t the answer.
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Opinion
Regrets over pier recognition
The monumental fall-out between Graham Morrison and Marks Barfield which featured on last week’s front page presumably broke after Morrison had dispatched his letter to the City of London planners objecting to the proposal to build a floating park opposite his Thames-side flat.
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Opinion
In bed with Brett
Star attraction at the AA’s 51N4E exhibition is this daybed the practice designed for a house in its native Belgium.
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Opinion
Birthing pains
Boots is grateful to the blog Spitalfields Life for highlighting the plight of the area’s former Jewish Maternity Hospital, where Alma Cogan, Arnold Wesker and Lionel Bart were all born, and which is threatened with demolition by the Peabody Trust to make way for a 14-storey tower.
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Opinion
Chamber of horrors
It seems not everyone hates MediaCity UK as much as this year’s Carbuncle Cup jury.
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Opinion
Should the Venturis be given this year’s RIBA Gold Medal?
Yes, says Charles Holland, the duo’s contribution is phenomenal; but Jack Pringle claims the pair’s buildings failed to live up to their fine words
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Opinion
Life beyond London
Peter Bishop’s vision of devolved design review is going to be hard to deliver but worth the struggle
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Opinion
Cities stand or fall on mediocrity
The standard of everyday buildings defines the architecture of the age
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Opinion
Trick of the light
Sean Griffiths of Fat is the latest architect to star in Icopal’s “Faces of British Architecture” ad campaign, photographed along with 43 other familiar faces (http://valencyarchive.co.uk/project/6319) by Tim Soar.
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Opinion
Healthcare facilities need the best designers
Just 40 years ago, in 1971, similar buildings to the Glasgow Maggie’s Centre (Buildings October 7) were built as “homes” for young disabled people then living out their lives in geriatric hospital wards.
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Opinion
Foster is on shaky ground
Norman Foster’s Jerusalem project sounds exciting (World News September 30), but there are reservations to participating in this scheme.