More Opinion – Page 169
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Opinion
Time to build on the Cold War legacy
Scrapping the nuclear budget would enable us to build our way out of recession
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Opinion
It's not gardens that are the problem
The end of so-called ‘garden grabbing’ in fact marks an abandonment of the the policies set out by the Urban Task Force.
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Opinion
Let’s nurture nature
I know architects are supposed to prize architecture above all, but some of us are concerned about agriculture too; concerned enough not to condone a glib formalistic view of how crops should be raised and animals husbanded
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Opinion
Grand designs
David Nixon’s piece on the International Space Station (Works June 4) was just brilliant. Great pictures and layout
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Opinion
Technical terms
Architectural “draughtsmen” did not get together to form their own organisation (Letters May 28)
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Opinion
Pricey principles
Your report on Tooley & Foster’s “zero carbon”housing in Basildon (News June 4) made my eyebrows shoot upwards so far that Nasa is thinking of using them as replacement shuttles to the International Space Station
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Opinion
Less than zero
BD June 4: zero-carbon 28 unit affordable housing at Basildon, £5.7 million pound development (News)
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Opinion
Upwardly mobile
Regulation-free or child-free zone? Please, have some respect for the kids of today (Letters May 21).
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Opinion
Correction: 11 June 2010
Contrary to our story on page 2 last week, there is no current threat of redundancies at Nightingale Associates following its sale to Canadian firm, IBI Group. BD would like to apologise for the error.
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Opinion
Has money been wasted on school design work?
Yes, says Katharine Quarmby, the programme is wasteful and overcomplicated; but John Waldron argues that BSF has done well in the face of a massive maintenance backlog.
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Opinion
Period features for Alsop, Finch and Zogolovitch
Fancy dress shops are being severely tested in the run up to the London Festival of Architecture, Boots learns
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Opinion
How the other half builds
The gap between low-cost housing and luxury developments grows ever wider.
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Opinion
Where now for Battersea Power Station?
Years ago I had the pleasure of spending an evening with Rafael Vinoly. It began with a certain amount of drama as he insisted on driving down a one way street on the way to the restaurant.
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Opinion
Why do architects choose names that require a BBC pronunciation manual?
If Buschow Henley wasn’t bad enough, the practice has now rebranded and come up with Henley Halebrown Rorrison guaranteed to be as troublesome to BBC newsreaders as al-Qa’eda and J K Rowling.
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Opinion
Another day, another reason to lay into Michael Gove
Gove’s gaffes aren’t quite up there with Tony Hayward, BP’s chief executive. On the other hand it takes quite a lot to stir RIBA and by yesterday it was sufficiently wound up by the education secretary’s latest comment to put out a press release.
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Opinion
Architecture’s final frontier
The Pantheon and the International Space Station share the ability of great buildings to inspire wonder
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Opinion
Revisit the reshuffle
Ed Vaizey and John Penrose are ministers under the secretary of state at the Department for Culture Media & Sport
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Opinion
Going Dutch offers food for thought
Should the UK sacrifice its land to the intensive farming methods of the Netherlands?
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Opinion
Can supermarket buildings ever be good architecture?
Alex Lifschutz of Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands says supermarkets are well-designed when they improve neighbourhoods but Mitchell Taylor Workshop’s Piers Taylor believes the design is just building as hoarding