More Opinion – Page 371

  • Opinion

    Terror warning

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    After the Madrid bombings and a year since the invasion of Iraq, it is a good time to reflect on how terrorism is working. We should consider what a national response should be, and, as a profession responsible for the environment, we should start a more open and balanced debate.We ...

  • Opinion

    Spurning the table

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Maybe I am the only architect who looked at your front cover picture “Table for Toronto” (News April 16) and thought, “Thank God I don’t live in Canada”.That poor defenceless Victorian building being trodden on by an invader from another world of class unpleasantness. What a streetscape. Graffiti walls, hideous ...

  • Opinion

    On deaf ears

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    An extraordinary state of affairs has recently arisen in respect of Arb. Last July, the professional organisations were consulted on possible amendments to the composition of Arb's professional conduct committee. The Association of Consultant Architects suggested a Parliamentary Committee should investigate Arb and the Architects Act 1997.However, on March 11, ...

  • Opinion

    Arb propaganda

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Susan Ware invites your readers to take a look at a fuller version of her letter (April 2) on Arb's website. There, in an attempt to defend the indefensible from the well-directed criticism of Jack Pringle, she claims that a less secretive organisation is difficult to imagine.It speaks loudly of ...

  • Opinion

    Essex lies

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    I was horrified to learn from Concrete Boots (April 2) that I was quoted as using the term “Basildonisation”. I have never used this word, nor have I compared Basildon unfavourably in any way; I do not know Basildon well enough to comment on its merits or demerits. Clearly, the ...

  • Opinion

    Dairy delight

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    In response to Richard Weston’s piece, “The divine bovine (Backspace April 8), we thought that, a copy of the “Three Cows” short-listed entry for the Burrell Gallery competition might help to illustrate the point of his article. The illustration depicts one seated cow, containing the main entrance and ancillary accommodation, ...

  • Opinion

    Hey good looking

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Congratulations on dragging BD’s layout into the 21st century. It hadn’t changed much in the 30 years since it first appeared as a tabloid (which I guess says quite a lot for the original concept) – but you have made the most of the use of colour, big pictures ...

  • Opinion

    Adult-only Egan

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Architects are shuddering again at the thought of John Egan returning to the fray with his skills report this week. Memories of wrestling with his obsession with supply chain management came flooding back to designers at the Building Awards on Tuesday. Egan, it seems, is for adults only. “I wouldn’t ...

  • Opinion

    Growing pains

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Ken Shuttleworth knows a thing or two about office space, having designed half of the landmark schemes in London lately. But even in the name of research, isn’t moving his own office four times in just three-and-a-half months pushing it a bit? His new office, Make, will shortly be ...

  • Opinion

    Root of a problem

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    South Bank Centre chief executive Michael Lynch’s prediction that the revamp of the South Bank Centre will be complete by 2010 is surely a hostage to fortune. The Royal Festival Hall project has a green light, but problems still run deep – a couple of inches deep – on ...

  • Opinion

    Wembley detour

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Remember walking down Wembley Way to a big match? The palpable sense of procession towards a national icon. Let's hope things don't change. Boots hears whispers that Quintain, the developer of the new "pedway" from Wembley Park tube station to the stadium, is keen for its competing architects to lead ...

  • Opinion

    The art of Zen

    2004-04-23T00:00:00Z

    How architecture happens: Malcolm Fraser was enjoying a contented afternoon in his Edinburgh office, listening to four second-hand Rod Stewart albums he had just bought for £2.50 when the phone started ringing and ringing… a local paper had unveiled Fraser's scheme for 150 Tibetan-style flagpoles on Edinburgh's Carlton Hill, with ...

  • Opinion

    Stand firm against PFI trophy hunters

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Is it commercially astute or cynically manipulative to hire good architects to improve your PFI bid and then drop their services once you’ve won?

  • Opinion

    The celebrity racket

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    “I am summoned to the RIPBA. The president, Fred Trousers, has ‘writer’s skid’”

  • Opinion

    Angela Brady

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Building the Dream is a new reality game show with the biggest prize ever given away on daytime TV – a £500,000 house designed by architect Brady Mallalieu. Here Brady talks to Karen Glaser about being broadcast to the nation

  • Opinion

    Design falls into the wrong hands

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    One can’t fault the intention behind the amendment of planning law to improve building design standards, but providing local planning authorities with the power to determine the design merits of an application will not necessarily end happily.Having recently won two planning appeals; the grounds in part being based on PPG1 ...

  • Opinion

    Unlucky winner

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    I refer to the front-page story, "Client shows 'contempt' for RIBA contest" (News April 8).First, the Middlesbrough town hall competition was not an RIBA contest. Second, the RIBA did not run a design competition for the Corn Exchange in Bury St Edmunds. The basis of selection was competitive interview with ...

  • Opinion

    Lessons in prefab

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    What is wrong with prefabricated schools? Clearly, it is justifiable to condemn the development of a building’s detail design proceeding without the full involvement of its architect. However, “Schools face ‘dumbing down’” (News April 2) did not primarily address this. It appeared to focus more on the suggestion that prefabrication ...

  • Opinion

    Cost versus ego

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Victor Stellyes, project manager for contractor Costain on Daniel Libeskind's London Metropolitan University building, revealed the high level of cost-cutting at a recent BD conference.His illustrations showed the scheme had not altogether changed, but the project lost its stellar appeal because the closer details, finishes and specification lacked the careful ...

  • Opinion

    Quality in quantity

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Further to the article "RIBA plots credentials crackdown" (News April 2), I would like to clarify the issues discussed.My quotes relate to outline proposals for a higher standard of chartered practice. Out of this may come some changes to the RIBA registered practice system, but there are no firm plans ...