More Opinion – Page 163
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Opinion
Code challenge
An investment of £6 billion would not fund the site acquisition and construction of 100,000 “affordable homes”. Probably half that number at Code level 3 and a third of that number at Code level 6
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Opinion
Library not fine
I cannot imagine what prompted you to feature (presumably with approval) the gross extension to the Croydon Carnegie Library (First Look August 27)
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Opinion
Talking points
The salient feature that distinguishes Peter Rees (Profile August 27) from most other planning officers is his intellectual courage. He is also an architect, which assists positive discussions.Michael Manser, London
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Opinion
Should ministers become involved with street design?
Daniel Moylan thinks Eric Pickles has made a useful intervention, but Richard Kemp argues that he is meddling in local matters
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Opinion
Biennale’s breakfast of champions
Forget the Golden Lion, the only competition anyone at Venice was really interested in was who had the best hotel
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Opinion
Standards can see off sharks
Housebuilders’ customer satisfaction levels may not tell the whole story
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Opinion
Boris is brave to think bigger
Ignore the critics, London’s new housing design guide will mainly give us a size of home long enjoyed in western Europe
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Opinion
The resistance to regen starts here
Embracing every regeneration project on offer does no favours to our rundown urban areas
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Opinion
Do we need national design standards for housing?
Ewan Willars thinks standards will provide the challenge to produce innovative design, while Andrew Whitaker thinks there is no place for them in private housing
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Opinion
Debt and doubt for architecture graduates
It seems that only an extremely foolhardy 16-year-old student would choose to pursue a career in architecture if they pay any attention to the advice they’re getting from their careers advisers.
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Opinion
I’m going to have to let you go
Everything’s getting dumped faster and faster, and that includes good stuff like Broadgate.
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Opinion
Resorts should kick the bucket
Recent news that the average visitor to Redcar spends just £1.70 typifies the problems of Britain’s many rundown seaside towns
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Opinion
Firm responds
I wish to add some much-needed clarification to the story published on August 17
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Opinion
Cracking Brazil
In response to your story “Practices look abroad as double dip looms” (News August 13), I believe that there are two main reasons why very few foreign architectural practices have acted in Brazil so far
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Opinion
Shaving foam
I deeply resent your characterisation of the Strata tower as “decked out with Philishave stylings” (Carbuncle Cup, August 13).
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Opinion
Corrections: 13 August 2010
We have been asked to point out that the architects of the 1970 main museum extension to Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge were Leslie Martin and David Owers (News July 23).
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Opinion
Architectural education needs change, says Neil Spiller
Former Bartlett tutor Neil Spiller is as apprehensive as the freshers as he embarks on his new role as head of Architecture & Construction at the University of Greenwich.
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Opinion
The politics of pedal power
London’s cycle-hire scheme is as much a symbolic as technical achievement.
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Opinion
Are we heading for a double-dip recession?
Maribel Mantecon says that, given our consumerist lifestyles, it is a self-fulfilling prophecy. But John Bushell believes there is still cause for optimism
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Opinion
Quick on the draw in Venice
Budding artists are being encouraged to sign up for the RIBA Trust’s drawing session which it’s running at the Venice Architecture Biennale on August 28