All Opinion articles – Page 372

  • 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

    The celebrity racket

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

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

  • Opinion

    Clissold cacophony

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    A series of bizarre faults with the Clissold Leisure Centre are listed in Hackney council’s latest report on the troubled north London building. One item on the list reads: “Inadequate privacy to female changing rooms.” Another states: “Blocked symphonic drainage outlets”. The last one perplexed BD. Isn’t the word “symphonic” ...

  • Opinion

    Ban the bad

    2004-04-16T00:00:00Z

    RIBA president George Ferguson is urging architects to “practise intolerance” on bad architecture with a rallying call on the profession to be “as intolerant of bad and mediocre architecture and planning as we should be of bad food”. So next time you walk past a building, you don’t like you ...

  • 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

    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

    Unashamed

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    As one of the planning authorities "named and shamed" in your article on the planning delivery grant (News March 12) I would like to assure you that the reason for Cannock Chase District Council's poor success rate in defending its decisions on appeal over the last year or so has ...

  • Opinion

    The show of tomorrow

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    London has finally got a £100,000 show to celebrate Archigram, and host, the Design Museum, will have been well pleased with a glamorous launch show last week where luminaries spotted included model Marie Helvin and actress Eleanor Bron. Archigramites have been trying to put on a show for the past ...

  • Opinion

    Shed no tears

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Great Comment & Analysis (March 26), but ShedKM would like to point out to your readers that we didn’t actually enter the competition. In fact we never have done!Whether this is because of false modesty, or that we are just too busy is unclear. Perhaps, though, we accept that our ...

  • Opinion

    Pomo silliness

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    So Robert Venturi denies he is a post-modernist (Comment & Analysis March 19). The Pope has also denied he is a Catholic, I believe. The Venturis' great pomo legacy was to remove any idea of the social or political relevance of architecture and redefine it in purely aesthetic decorated sheds/ducks ...

  • Opinion

    Ian Martin

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

  • Opinion

    Help wanted

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Young and malleable or old and experienced? Issues arise when adding a new member of staff

  • Opinion

    Fool’s gold

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    How terribly droll for the Royal Scottish Academy to open up its press day on April I with some huge, well-viewed images by Terry Farrell. The cappa mounted photographs take up a whole wall, just for fun and include some sketches that the great man may have produced while running ...

  • Opinion

    A privileged few

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    The point about Thatcher's children ("Why don't these Brits win YAYA? Comment & Analysis March 26) is that they are now Blair's graduates, struggling to pay back student debts before hopefully scraping together enough money to buy a house whose price rises quicker than their income.This is the real context ...

  • Opinion

    Festival facts

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Gordon Miller (Skylon revisited, Letters March 26) seems a bit confused. The Sea and Ships pavilion, in front of the Dome of Discovery at the Festival of Britain, was designed by Basil Spence’s London office under Andrew Renton, and I was involved with designing this building, and also worked on ...

  • Opinion

    Someone different

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    With a plethora of candidates all barrelling at the presidential title, a sense of proportion is needed at the RIBA.For peace of mind I would go with Brian Godfrey, a man who I believe is of his time, a man of unsullied reputation and plainness and courteousness. The press will ...

  • Opinion

    Terms of confusion

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Our Vision for a new settlement on the banks of the River Moscow (News April 2), and in particular our use of allegorical descriptions for the layering of urban quarters that our masterplan creates, seems to have created a great deal of confusion at both BD and Edaw.All great towns ...

  • Opinion

    Clever Rem stumped

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Rem Koolhaas is notoriously obsessed with media coverage of his work, which is why a few weeks ago his office asked BD to fax a recent editorial to their Dutch headquarters.The editorial, which argued Rem was “too clever”, was duly faxed across and received with silence.But, according to BD’s moles, ...

  • Opinion

    Chinese see red

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    London-based Weston Williamson is down to the final three for a new train station in Beijing. But the practice had some interesting feedback from the Chinese client on its original design. The station was originally a bright shade of Communist red, a colour the practice thought the client might appreciate, ...

  • Opinion

    Burying the past

    2004-04-08T00:00:00Z

    It turns out the developers that demolished one side of the beautiful Spitalfields market on the edge of the City of London have suddenly developed a taste for heritage and history. Once a very large and bustling historic market complete with five-a-side football pitches, Spitalfields is now a much smaller ...