More Opinion – Page 350

  • Opinion

    Inspired teaching

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    I was interested to see your piece on art teacher Robin Noscoe’s design for a cricket pavilion/ open-air theatre being listed (Concrete Boots November 12). I was one of the “band of merry pupils” who assisted in its construction, at Canford School in Dorset, in the mid-sixties.

  • Opinion

    Held to ransom

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    Re “Crackdown on Foreign architects” (News November 5), I would not have expected this from a branch of the UK government that effectively has monopoly control over the profession.

  • Opinion

    Raising the bar

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    There have been continuing controversial issues relating to the Temple Bar, one of which is whether or not it is Wren’s work (News Analysis November 19).

  • Opinion

    Lie detector

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    In your article (News November 19) concerning Arb’s accusation that BT is wrongly listing individuals as architects, you quote a BT spokesman as saying that “it is up to the architects not to lie to us”. He is describing the people concerned as architects, which if they are lying they ...

  • Opinion

    Crate waste

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    I was discouraged to find another potential worry for those who care about timber.

  • Opinion

    Freedom suit split

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    Concerning the lawsuit filed by a Yale architecture student (News November 12), who claims his design was used as the basis for the design of the Freedom Towers, it separates Daniel Libeskind’s contributions (the height, the shape of the spire to echo the the Statue of Liberty’s torch) from David ...

  • Opinion

    The root of all evil, but we want a share

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    What is it with architects and money?

  • Opinion

    Concrete Boots

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    Comic inspirationThe headquarters of the Prince’s Foundation in London’s fashionable Hoxton is well stocked with books, but a closer look at the collection reveals some surprising titles. For example, the foundation is the last place one would expect to see graphic novels by controversial and often lewd comic-book artist Robert ...

  • Opinion

    Suzi Towel

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    Come on, architects — let’s see more of you in Fatbusters T-shirts, fighting the flab for a healthier Culture

  • Opinion

    Teaching should be schools’ priority

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    When the news first broke that the Cambridge architecture school was in crisis, it seemed only a matter of time before the rest suffered a similar fate. Now other schools in the prestigious Russell Group are under pressure to improve their research performance, at the expense of their traditional emphasis ...

  • Opinion

    Fee hike hits the most vulnerable

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Here we go again. The most vulnerable are the ones to suffer in the so-called drive to improve efficiency (“Crackdown on foreign architects”, News November 5).What is the justification for an almost 500% increase by Arb in the cost for getting non-EU part I and part II equivalent qualifications recognised?The ...

  • Opinion

    Go the extra mile

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    I believe the RIBA is being unnecessarily harsh on Arb (News November 5) with regards to the 500% increase in fees to recognise non-EU part I and II equivalent degrees.The new fee of £1,996 I am to pay merely covers the expense of one return flight to New ...

  • Opinion

    Fame drain

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Our practice, along with 200 others, entered the Architecture Foundation’s design competition for its new headquarters. Like other small, “unknown” practices, we were encouraged to read that the AF “have no prejudices as to the fame or experience of the eventual winner”. But we were disappointed by the shortlist.Although there ...

  • Opinion

    Plenty of time

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Poor old Christoph Egret. According to Zoë Blackler (News Analysis November 12), “at 45 he is running out of time to build his own independently authored body of work”. Let’s hope not. He is half the age of Anthony Swain (Soapbox October 22), who gave up climbing scaffolding last ...

  • Opinion

    Witness appeal

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    I read your article, “Waiting for disaster” (News analysis November 5), with interest, but some puzzlement. In answer to the question “Who are these expert witnesses?”, Bickerdike Allen’s history goes back to founding partner Bill Allen’s days as chief architect and head of physics at the Building Research Establishment (which ...

  • Opinion

    Classic clanger

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Ian Martin may have been away last week, but one of his conceits seems to have found digital form, appearing in full colour on your front page (November 12).Some have suggested that the classicist tendency is no more than a cover for an absence of individual architectural vision, and the ...

  • Opinion

    In need of a leader

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Kevin Rhowbotham is clearly annoyed by his treatment at the Architectural Association and its failure to renew his contract (News November 5).He talks of a terminal situation, but, perversely, it is crisis and internal conflict that keeps the AA alive. I would suggest that, more importantly, the AA ...

  • Opinion

    Wrong Trousers

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    We have been instructed by our esteemed client, Mr Fred Trousers, to take action against BD for misleading impersonation. The clear impression was given that Mr Trousers had written the cunningly conceived “inverted pyramid of piffle” on the back page of last week’s issue. This, together with the digitally enhanced ...

  • Opinion

    The fine line between influence and rip-off

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    As an undergraduate I was accused by some generous-minded peers of “ripping off” a building that had just appeared in the Architectural Review. My scheme undeniably bore a striking resemblance to its alleged model, and protestations that I had never set eyes on it before fell on deaf ears.

  • Opinion

    Egged on

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Massimiliano Fuksas has reason to celebrate this week after winning the commission to regenerate Salford — his first project on British soil. How he plans to toast this success is anyone’s guess, but the world-famous architect does have a liking for an extremely expensive substance — caviar.Interviewed by BD this ...