More Opinion – Page 353

  • Opinion

    Reality check

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Thank goodness Caruso St John (First look October 8) was not appointed to the Scottish Parliament project, or it might have clad every elevation in tartan.Sean Lyall, Nottingham

  • Opinion

    Walsall wonder

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    I feel it necessary to spring to Caruso St John’s defence (Letters October 15).

  • Opinion

    Font of beauty

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Kathryn Gustafson’s Princess Diana Memorial Fountain is a serene and beautiful piece of work.

  • Opinion

    Timber trouble

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    While no one doubts Greenpeace’s intentions on FSC timber (News October 15), the RIBA and others might just find themselves in trouble with European and national competition law on restriction of supply of goods and services. Ian Macpherson, Guildford

  • Opinion

    Fall guy

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Reviewing the Raymond Erith exhibition (Culture October 15), Thomas Muirhead explains how the ‘0’ on the front door of 10 Downing Street is “deliberately falling over”.

  • Opinion

    A helping hand from start to finish

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    As a journalist, I know that beginnings and endings are the hardest part of any story.

  • Opinion

    Concrete Boots

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Demolition manBD columnist Ian Martin pokes weekly fun at the profession through his back-page column, but little did he expect that one of his architectural fantasies would come true. Martin recently wrote about a new show called Detonate in which the country’s worst buildings would be blown up. Now Channel ...

  • Opinion

    Ian Martin

    2004-10-22T00:00:00Z

    MondayWorking breakfast (via videophone) with Norman, still aglow at getting Building of the Year for his Lewinsky Tower. “The only way is up, Norm,” I tell him. “These sausages are great.”His voice drops. Did I know he’s currently working on the “largest project on the planet”? I have three guesses. ...

  • Opinion

    Green shoots of sustainability

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    Here’s a statistic for you. Every year in the UK, 3.5 billion bricks are made and 2.5 billion are destroyed. It doesn’t take a genius to work out the absurdity of such an equation, especially as the construction industry comes under growing pressure to do more than just curb its ...

  • Disney doily: Caruso St John’s art gallery.
    Opinion

    Nottinghams Lace disgrace

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    As an architect who works for a practice based in Nottingham’s Lace Market, I was bitterly disappointed by Caruso St John’s scheme for a new art gallery on our doorstep (First Look October 8). This is not the sour grapes or the vitriolic “should have been us” knee-jerk reaction that ...

  • Opinion

    Pointless challenge

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    Zoë Blackler rightly draws attention to the fact that the costs of all challenges to Arb legitimacy are being passed on to subscribers (Editorial October 1).

  • Opinion

    Crane overreaches

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    I am sorry to have to correct Alan Crane (Editorial October 1).The RIBA has not “requested Arb’s view on the quality of its reports” in the way Crane suggests. However, if Arb has constructive criticism, we will be happy to discuss it with them. The feedback we have to date, ...

  • Opinion

    Duty to the client

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    Too many people have the misconception that an architect’s registration with Arb and protection of title are for the commercial benefit of the architect. They are totally for the client’s protection.Registration requires the architect to have been sufficiently educated and trained in the complexities of the service to a sufficient ...

  • Opinion

    Community spirit

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    It is important that the system adopted by Cabe for scoring the quality of new housing is both rigorous and valid (see page 6). In particular, the rating of “community” cannot be satisfied just by physical inspection, although this has been the practice in the architectural profession up till now ...

  • War zone: Duxford Imperial War Museum.
    Opinion

    Counting claim

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    Has it not occurred to the ODPM that the increase in the number of planning applications decided within eight weeks (News October 1) might have something to do with the increase in the number of planning applications this year? Prescott should ask the Planning Inspectorate if they think this is ...

  • Opinion

    Up shire creek

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    Graham Bizley’s understanding, that Duxford Imperial War Museum is Oxford’s (In Detail October 8) rather than Cambridge’s, is a load of shire.

  • Opinion

    The silent treatment wont passify public

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    When things go wrong, the public’s perception of architects is defined by what they say or do not say. This week the architect Kathryn Gustafson told the world why she was not to blame for the series of glitches that closed the Diana Memorial Fountain. Unfortunately, the effect of her ...

  • Opinion

    Wright stage

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    When George Bush and John Kerry had their final public debate on Wednesday in the run-up to the US presidential election, it was against a backdrop originally designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Iraq. The Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium at Arizona State University was originally going to be the Baghdad ...

  • Opinion

    French stick

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    Film director Michael Winner this week showed his knowledge of architecture on BBC2’s Room 101. Winner wanted to put all modern architecture into the room of guests’ most hated things, and by that he meant all buildings built circa 1970 or later. Having banged on about “dreadful glass buildings”, Winner ...

  • Opinion

    Blind ambition?

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    How government policy works: Wayne Hemmingway and John Prescott are discussing housing density and the deputy prime minister apparently voices concern that too much density means neighbours can peer into your windows, creating, shall we say, privacy problems. For Wayne, an advocate of all things dense, there’s a simple solution. ...