More Opinion – Page 148
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Opinion
Is the RIBA’s action on low pay tough enough?
Insisting students are paid minimum wage is an important marker of change says RIBA president Ruth Reed; while Keith Tomlinson says the institute should have gone further
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Opinion
Madge on the cadge
The mother of all PR operations kicked into gear last week as Madonna explained to the world why she would not be proceeding with the construction of an elite academy for girls in Malawi.
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Opinion
It was acceptable in the 80s
Osborne’s new enterprise zones reflect the misplaced belief that planning is the enemy of development
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Opinion
Landlords like Gaddafi won’t drop rents
New squatting laws and benefit cuts aren’t going to make the private rental sector effective
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Opinion
Should we turn run-down high streets into housing?
Yes, says Alex Morton, shopping and living patterns have changed; while Elizabeth Cox thinks they need to remain the hub of the community
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Opinion
Residents are living proof
While I agreed with much of your leader “Local identity is the least of it” (March 11), it unfortunately concluded with the usual inaccurate criticisms levelled at housebuilders.
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Opinion
Surface tensions
Make’s 5 Broadgate scheme for Swiss bank UBS (News March 18) shows how hard it is to achieve Ken Shuttleworth’s insistence on no more than 30-40% glazing, which is what we should all be trying to achieve.
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Opinion
Under invested?
So, as Sir Fred may have advised, RMJM has packed all its debt (ie current financial situation) into the issue of new shares which it will then sell to its own staff (bdonline March 16).
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Opinion
Time to mix it up
Converting commercial rights to residential rights will not produce successful regeneration, only another residential district demanding inefficient and duplicated services and where transport and energy mistakes of the past are repeated (“Turn redundant high streets into housing says think-tank” bdonline, March 21).
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Opinion
Never forget
How pleasing were the days when the AA chairman, like Hannibal, could mount elephants (Archive, March 18). Much of the credit goes to the charismatic and riotously funny Phil Hudson, then of the AA Student Union.
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Opinion
Rural practices
lan Deacon’s recommendation to students to read The Honeywood File (and follow it up, presumably, with The Honeywood Settlement) (Letters March 18) reminded me of another pair of books I must transfer from bookshelf to travel bag.
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Opinion
Who can afford localism?
Neighbourhood plans will only be as local as the people that pay for them
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Opinion
What is the true value of education?
It’s time we realised that architecture degrees aren’t simply career launch pads
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Opinion
Waging war on pay complaints
Keir Alexander should stop propagating the myth that architects are poorly paid (Letters March 11).
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Opinion
Market forces
Peter Stephens’ anguish and Keir Alexander’s depressing conclusion that architecture will be left for those who can afford it if students are lured into the City (Letters March 11) reawaken the age-old problem.
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Opinion
Unwise words
It was entertaining to find two examples of unconscious irony on one page (Opinion March 11).
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Opinion
School of thought
Taking account of all the current problems in practice and education, is there a practical alternative to educating in universities?
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Opinion
Golden oldie
In response to “Are Schools of Architecture letting Students down?” (Debate March 11), I regularly recommend HB Creswell’s novel The Honeywood File to students.
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Opinion
The art of design
It is interesting in the week that you revisit Koolhaas’s “inside out” Kunsthal (Inspiration March 4) that you also present the proposals for the V&A’s underground gallery extension.