More Opinion – Page 358

  • Opinion

    How to spot a bully, and what to do next

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    I stand accused. Firstly of plotting to ambush and trick members of my client team, and secondly of working to my own secret agenda and not as part of a team.

  • Opinion

    Concrete Boots

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Holyrood idolGlamorous Holyrood architect Benedetta Tagliabue just can’t stop turning heads, and journalists are no exception, it seems.A recent profile of the Italian published in Scotland on Sunday was reminiscent of, well, Mills & Boon actually.“She glides over hillocks of rubble with grace and effortless elegance, a smile on her ...

  • Opinion

    Stop building, says architect

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Chris Morton, Herefordshire

  • Opinion

    Wheres the sense?

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Denis McCoy, Oxfordshire

  • Opinion

    Making noises

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Ivor Samuels, Oxford

  • Opinion

    Empty promises

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    John Outram, London

  • Opinion

    Uphill battle

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Budd, Sheffield

  • Opinion

    Ian Martin

    2004-08-27T00:00:00Z

    I switch off the fan and watch the Me–Shell deflate around him. He looks like a petulant cartoon ghost

  • Opinion

    China’s crisis of conscience

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Rem Koolhaas had a choice to make in early 2002 and ordered a Chinese meal to give him the strength to make it. Should he bid for the Ground Zero project in Manhattan or the China Central Television building in Beijing?

  • Opinion

    Speaking the same urban language

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    In his recent article (Soapbox July 23), RIBA president George Ferguson rightly highlights the need to put urban studies at the heart of the urban renaissance if we are going to revitalise our cities and protect the countryside. After decades of neglect, people are once more returning to more civilised ...

  • Opinion

    Hospital drama

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    It is clear that the £1 billion Royal London Hospital has some issues (News and Editorial July 30), but to use this to rail against the concept of PFI is unbalanced. Specifically regarding design of such projects — and this would be true no matter the procurement route — ...

  • Aran Chadwick: Play by new rules.
    Opinion

    Architects dogme

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Aran Chadwick (Technicalities July 23) makes an interesting connection between the restrictions of the “Dogme” films and those imposed on the making of buildings. The connection could be taken further with a highly selective and restrictive set of rules based on Dogme’s “vow of chastity”. The goal would be to ...

  • Golden opportunity: Viñoly's arts centre.
    Opinion

    No slip-ups here

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Further to your article “End of the iconic age?” (News July 23), in which you cite our new visual arts building for Colchester by Rafael Viñoly, I would like to clarify the status and concept of the project.It is an ambitious but viable scheme made possible by a partnership consisting ...

  • Opinion

    Look no further

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    To all those firms putting themselves to the trouble of recruiting abroad (News July 30), would it take too much imagination to offer flexible or part-time work? Maybe this could tempt back some of the women who have left the profession in their droves because of the difficulties of combining ...

  • Opinion

    Learning curve

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Now that the shock has subsided, it is important to assess the implications of the alarming failure rate at Birmingham School of Architecture. The school (and its external examiners) should be commended for having the resolve to fail students who have not achieved the required standards. This is far less ...

  • Opinion

    Fee farce

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    It is interesting to note that the RIBA is suggesting that architects will be able to enhance our fees in the future by first subscribing to the long-discredited notion of “architectural determinism” and, second, doing our jobs properly by producing well-designed buildings (News August 6).

  • Opinion

    Slaves to detail must not win urban battle

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    We have wound ourselves into a Gordian knot. We allow a cynical builder to construct 14 units in mock heritage style shoehorned inelegantly onto a site appropriate for half that amount; while an ambitious, daring and modern interpretation that challenges the site and tries in its own way to contribute ...

  • Opinion

    Arch conventional

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Ronald McDonald has spurned some of the hottest architectural talent in Chicago for some of his own in-house architects. Proposals by Helmut Jahn for a new burger outlet in Chicago, featuring a pair of 100ft golden arches, were spurned by McDonald’s in favour of a more conventional scheme. But, when ...

  • Opinion

    Sound and vision

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    The hold music for RTKL’s Beijing office is the theme music from Quentin Tarantino’s movie, Kill Bill. Considering most of the film was shot in China and features lots of martial arts and samurai swords, it is hard to think of anything more appropriate. Except for Libeskind’s “New York, New ...

  • Opinion

    Putting years on

    2004-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Hospital design is under the spotlight like never before following Cabe’s savaging of the proposed Royal London Hospital. So it is cheering to hear that architects at Capita Symonds have transformed themselves into old people for the sake of good design. In redesigning Derby City General Hospital, the architects have ...