More Opinion – Page 354

  • Opinion

    Raising a squiggle

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    So Zaha Hadid may finally get to build in the UK, with a £50 million transport museum in Glasgow. Of course, she has won commissions in the UK before that have failed to transpire. Her competition-winning design for the Cardiff Opera House was unceremoniously dropped nearly a decade ago. But ...

  • Opinion

    Libeskind tells all

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    A review copy of Daniel Libeskind’s autobiography finally arrived at BD this week. The book is a perfect reflection of Libeskind in that it is strange and short. It contains such revelations as New York is a place where “no one has ever said anything nasty “ to him; when ...

  • Opinion

    Ian Martin

    2004-10-15T00:00:00Z

    I’d suggest putting them on the market as a boutique hotel, a Museum of Democracy and a religious timeshare

  • Opinion

    Can Cabe resuscitate hospital design?

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    After five years in the business of persuading ministers and civil servants that good design counts, the Commission for Architecture & the Built Environment is still struggling to weave its magic with the health mandarins.

  • Opinion

    Russian kickstart for the Kyoto revolution

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Climate campaigners were delighted at last week’s news that Russia will ratify the Kyoto protocol on climate change. This is a major step forward as it will bring the international agreement into force. It will also further shame the US administration, which refuses to sign up to Kyoto or accept ...

  • Opinion

    No diversion from the real issues

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    In response to your story and leader (BD October 1), we did not release the RIBA Council’s report on Arb until days after we had sent a copy to Arb’s chairman following the council debate, although, in true BD style, you seemed to be well informed.Trade press interest may focus ...

  • Opinion

    Making no sense

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Your front page (News October 1) tells us that 85% of respondents to RIBA’s survey wanted to retain protection of title and not abolish Arb; 70% said the RIBA should control entry to the profession; and 80% that the RIBA alone should control the profession’s knowledge base, which, presumably includes ...

  • Peter Cook: HOK’s new star striker
    Opinion

    The beautiful game

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Behold. Peter Cook and HOK have kickstarted the long-overdue transfer system in the world of architecture (News September 17). Be honest, in any office not all architects have the same skills. There are goalkeepers, those wizened characters who know how not to get sued; defenders, who can meet any ...

  • Opinion

    Memorial misery

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    In your editorial on the Holyrood competition (September 17), you quote Lord Fraser, who investigated and reported on the numerous problems surrounding this project, in one of his conclusions “that all but one of the competing architects blithely ignored both the brief and the budget”. Something similar happened to the ...

  • Leaving a bitter taste: Alsop’s coffee pot.
    Opinion

    Strained design

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Your exasperating article, “Well-brewed designs” (News September 24), describing how “22 of the world’s best-known architects” have designed coffee and teapots, demonstrates an almost total ignorance of tea and coffee. Master Li said during a t’ai chi lesson, “straining to look beautiful or original is like having the idea of ...

  • Opinion

    Beyond the trees

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Amid the generation of hot air over timber supplies and Forestry Stewardship Council standards, I wonder if the protagonists eat out-of-season strawberries or mange tout from Zimbabwe.The construction industry’s spend may well be large and its effects far-reaching, but surely more people spend at supermarkets and can, collectively, moderate worldwide ...

  • Opinion

    Political vibes

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    You’ve heard the critics’ verdicts about Holyrood, but what you really want to know is what the vibe is like. The feng shui vibe, that is.The Scotsman sent a geomancer into the new building to find out. Delivering his verdict, Chi Wing, founder of the Feng Shui Research Centre, said: ...

  • Opinion

    Nimby Blair?

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    If the Blairs were seeking a quiet life at their £3.6 million town house in Connaught Square they may be disappointed. Landscape specialist Lovejoy is proposing to pedestrianise the nearby Marble Arch area. Tony and Cherie will wave goodbye to the 1960s gyratory system, and the labyrinth of underpasses would ...

  • Opinion

    Starck contrasts

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    The poor have a new hero in Phillipe Starck, who has rebranded himself the Robin Hood of design. In New York magazine last week, he said in architecture or product design “the goal is the same: how I make life better for my tribe”. So how does he do that? ...

  • Opinion

    Gaud gaffe

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Legendary Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí has finally made it to north London. Former movie special-effects man Chris Ostwald has converted a shopfront in Muswell Hill in the style of the great designer. But the council has asked him to either apply for retrospective planning permission, or tear it down. It ...

  • Opinion

    Fashion revealed

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    Wearing something from H&M or Zara to work today? Feeling pretty groovy with change in your pocket for lunch? Not for long. The fashion stakes just got higher with architect Sally Mackereth and Karen Wong, David Adjaye’s right-hand women, modelling a few thousand pounds worth of clothes in the FT’s ...

  • Opinion

    Ian Martin

    2004-10-08T00:00:00Z

    I tell her that unless she’s cycled here all the way from the town hall she has no moral authority whatsoever

  • Opinion

    RIBA must kiss and make up with Arb

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The RIBA’s latest challenge to the Arb marks yet another battle in a futile war.

  • Opinion

    DDA is a learning curve worth taking

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    Until now it was easy to say that everyone should be aware of issues that affect how disabled people use the built environment.

  • Opinion

    Concrete Boots

    2004-10-01T00:00:00Z

    No tears shedEdinburgh-based architect Moray Royles is still waiting for a public inquiry verdict on whether a shed in his garden complies with strict local planning regulations and will be able to remain. But Royles is not bothered by the delay. “The longer the verdict takes the better, because I ...