More Opinion – Page 316
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Opinion
Now Cameron must take on planning
As a reporter on this paper I was sent to cover the unveiling of major new development. It was called King’s Cross.
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Opinion
I'm off, but don't drop the artistry
I had decided that in my final leader before stepping down as BD editor I would ditch my usual attempt to make sense of the week's news and instead strike out into new ground.
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Opinion
Concrete Boots
He may share his name with a musical instrument but it's his singing voice Renzo Piano intends to show off in London this summer, Boots was amused to hear.
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Opinion
Onward and upward
I am one of the judges in the Fabulous International Skyscraper Design Competition 2006.
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Opinion
Talk about urbanism, with a biscuit
In Selfridges this week a Chinese artist has been overseeing an unusual city building programme.
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Opinion
Soapbox: Something's got to give over height
Here are three questions one could ask about a new building: Does it provide useful accommodation? Is it well-proportioned and pleasing to the eye? How tall is it?
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Opinion
Concrete Boots
Boots loves poems, which is why our hearts skipped a beat when we received a poem from reader Paul Shearsmith who is in a band: A Lad from Tad and the Train Crash Skaters.
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Opinion
Neighbour from hell
Why is the back page so coveted? Because it is the most fertile page in the whole magazine for taking the piss
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Opinion
Concrete Boots
Scouting through old issues of BD this week, Boots stumbled upon a fascinating piece written by none other than Norman Foster in 1974.
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Opinion
Soapbox: Making sure Arb is not ‘judge and jury'
The National Consumer Council has raised concerns and criticism about the RIBA's proposals to reform the Arb. It is worried we are failing to sufficiently take into account protection of the consumer in our plans.
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Opinion
The rising tide of impossible dreams
You can see what the attraction was for Margate's civic leaders. Here was a town with very little to shout about architecturally while all around the world the economic fortunes of towns and cities appeared to be transformed by the introduction of one architectural icon or another.
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Opinion
Middle class and proud
Marketing has always been a problem for architects. This is mainly due to a slight misunderstanding between you - a genius - and the client, who at best is a well-meaning amateur.
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Opinion
Rise above government's Part L botches
Here is Tony Blair speaking last month after a government report said there is only a small chance of greenhouse gas emissions being kept below dangerous levels: "It is now plain that the emission of greenhouse gases… is causing global warming at a rate that is unsustainable."
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Opinion
Halt this harmful demolition derby
The government's policy of housing market renewal is going wrong.