More Opinion – Page 208
-
Opinion
Charter fight
BD’s leader showing that Arb is unable to protect the public from pseudo-architects in the internet age was going along fine until suddenly it said: “Protect function by all means”
-
Opinion
Correction
The cart lodge designed by Adam Richards Architects (First Look February 20) has in fact not yet won planning permission from Lewes Council.
-
Opinion
What's so rewarding about bonuses?
Target-based payments can in fact motivate against professionalism
-
Opinion
Should protection of the title 'architect' be abolished?
Arb Reform Group's George Oldham and former RIBA president Owen Luder weigh into the debate
-
Opinion
More than enough for Boris
Mayor of London Boris Johnson was on top form at the London Planning Awards on Tuesday night in Foster & Partners’ City Hall, part of the More London development
-
Opinion
Title cannot be protected
Arb’s trawl through the Yellow Pages to track down title abusers is a waste of money
-
Opinion
A tragic tale of two Thamesmeads
The 60s estate’s potential could still be unlocked — given a bit of the cash squandered on its successor
-
Opinion
Should local authorities be given powers to scrap RDAs?
All this top-down stuff clearly hasn’t worked, says Tory housing spokesman Grant Shapps; while the TCPA’s Gideon Amos argues abolishing them would jeopardise future housing developments
-
Opinion
Don’t put profit ahead of people
The main problem with Robin Hood Gardens is a local authority which has no sense of how to cherish buildings that house a settled and close-knit community. The vast majority of residents in Robin Hood Gardens do not wish to leave their flats.
-
Opinion
The small stuff
My point in Debate (February 13) was that there is a lack of attention paid not to the beautiful gardens, parks and major public spaces of London, but to all the less signature, more ubiquitous public spaces that are, in fact, left over and in-between pieces of urban landscape.
-
Opinion
Anti-Arcadia
Sarah Gaventa (Debate February 13) says: “The best public spaces are always those where the community is involved.”
-
Opinion
Victoria vitriol
I must comment on your news story: “KPF given go-ahead for Victoria scheme” (News February 13).
-
Opinion
Barking parking
In answer to your questions about the car parking at Barking Riverside (Leader February 13), we are masterplanning phase one (1,500 homes).
-
Opinion
Little chance
I have to disagree with your article “Small firms will design 2012 legacy projects” (February 13).
-
Opinion
Fixing our city
Much of what Owen Hatherley (Urban Trawl February 6) says about Southampton is misleading and misinformed.
-
Opinion
Board matters
The so-called Arb Reform Group would appear to be determined to try to perpetuate the corrosive wrangling of the last 12-plus years, as evidenced by its near full-page advertisement in BD.
-
Opinion
Kill this cash cow
Sorry to bang on about PFI again, but I was left open-mouthed by the insouciance of Partnership for Schools boss Tim Byles saying that six banks have re-entered PFI lending (News February 13).
-
Opinion
Schools out: confidence turns to doubt at BSEC
Architects who attended the BSEC exhibition last week in Manchester were encouraged by the Department for School’s sparky head of capital projects Jane Briginshaw, who told the audience that she hoped the new wave of primary schools can produce designs as striking as AHMM’s Great Notley and BDP’s Hampden Gurney.
-
Opinion
All those against, say neigh
Knock, knock. Who’s there? Maybe it’s a big horse. Maybe it’s a big horse, who? Maybe it’s a big horse I’m a Londoner that I love London so…”
-
Opinion
After Foster's, no one is safe
If a practice that prided itself on the global spread of its projects has to slash its workforce, can anyone be immune to the recession?