All Opinion articles – Page 374

  • Opinion

    A sound solution

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Following your article “Heavenly sounds” (Solutions May 7) and the piece on Arup Acoustics’ Sound lab (Technical March 26), which both highlight the potential use of sound in architectural spaces, we thought that you might be interested in our experience.As architectural sound designers, our company Liminal, has carried out a ...

  • Opinion

    Shard stance

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Shard developer James Sellar was reported as saying that Cabe “had an agenda to make a stand for Cabe Space” in criticising plans for the public space around the Shard (News April 30). Cabe’s comments have been consistent since the scheme was first reviewed in 2000 – three years before ...

  • Opinion

    Say no to samey

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    While I quite agree with Robert Booth and David Lock (Editorial and News April 30) that we must pursue specificity not global sameyness, I must point out that he was not "the original masterplanner of Milton Keynes". This was, of course, the Llewelyn-Davies team, myself included.Lessons from Milton Keynes (when ...

  • Opinion

    Serving the rich

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    I was interested to see Nec Teymur’s response to Charles Jencks’s plea for a moral stance by architects (Letters May 7). The fact of the matter is that architectural practice seems devoid of any kind of moral imperative. As Teymur points out, architects go where the money is, whether it ...

  • Opinion

    In praise of resin

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    I was mortified to read of a fly getting caught in James Soane’s floor (Solutions April 30), but I must put the record straight. I love my resin floor, which was laid onto a standard 50-year-old screed, about six months ago. It not only looks gorgeous, but it is very ...

  • Opinion

    Scratched out

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Wondering about the ones that got away in our Power 40? Most disappointing for our Edinburgh contributor Malcolm Fraser will be the exclusion of reggae great Lee "Scratch" Perry. Malcolm reckons he proves "it's not things that matter, not notes or walls, but the space between them, the emptiness that ...

  • Opinion

    Ian Martin

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    If you can't stand the heat of genius, get out of the hyperbolic paraboloid

  • Opinion

    Slap of honour

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Cook also provided one of the event's more farcical moments when he met self-confessed flavour of the month Shih-fu Peng. The winner of the Egyptian museum competition sidled up to the Bartlett professor to shake his hand. Unfortunately, Cook evidently had no idea who the younger man was. "That's Shih-fu ...

  • Opinion

    Given the slip

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Architect Niall McLaughlin has secured new work of an unusual and rather unwelcome kind. A banana-mad minicab driver has taken to parking directly outside McLaughlin’s London office. Unfortunately, the late-night cabbie deposits a potentially dangerous pile of banana skins on the street, leaving public-spirited McLaughlin to deal with it each ...

  • Opinion

    Theatre of dreams

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Director of Netherlands-based practice S333, Chris Moller, certainly has a way with words. Discussing plans to regenerate Oldham, reported in last week’s First Look, the New Zealander was asked to describe his design for the new Oldham Coliseum theatre.“The theatre is in the sky, so to speak,” he said. ...

  • Opinion

    Doolan: a sad loss

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doolan’s death (News April 30) has certainly robbed Scottish culture and the architectural fraternity of one of its most gifted practitioners.A millionaire and largely self-taught, here was someone who dreamed and then built what he dreamed. No doubt it was not as simple as that, but to those of ...

  • Opinion

    Derry sorry

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    I note from your piece (News April 30) that the Playhouse, Artillery Street, Derry, has relocated to Derby (twice), which will come as quite a shock to all concerned. An interesting piece of relocation restoration indeed. Derry is a small city in Northern Ireland: you might have heard of it, ...

  • Opinion

    The daft declaration

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    "The Delft Declaration" has the ring of an announcement designed to reverberate through history. But the portentous-sounding communication from the heads of architecture schools is far from that.

  • Opinion

    Bum rap

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Archigram legend Peter Cook amused himself and his audience at the RIAS annual conference on Friday with his Carry On-style humour. Talking about his recent “friendly alien” art gallery in Graz, Austria, Cook preferred to call it a “naughty animal”.“In my naughtier moments, I call it a bum on a ...

  • Opinion

    Rab Bennetts

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Rab Bennetts was part of the RIBA team reviewing the institute's competitions process. We asked him what the problems were and what should be done

  • Opinion

    Late again

    2004-05-14T00:00:00Z

    The Scottish, meanwhile, had a nagging feeling of déjà vu.Like the Parliament building, Holyrood architect Benedetta Tagliabue also overran massively on her presentation to the conference. Oh, the irony.She was also overheard the previous evening, objecting to meeting a member of the RIAS at 8am the following day. “Is 8.30 ...

  • Opinion

    Sick of saving

    2004-05-07T00:00:00Z

    Janet Street-Porter has got her teeth into building conservation. She let rip in a Sunday newspaper about how the building conservation industry, which nets millions of pounds in fees for architects, makes her “sick”. “If there is one thing that makes me reach for the sickbag it is the British ...

  • Opinion

    One world? No thanks

    2004-05-07T00:00:00Z

    Architecture has reached a new level of political potency in the UK, but it takes a tussle between two foreigners this week to reveal it.

  • Opinion

    We’re motoring

    2004-05-07T00:00:00Z

    And so the baby’s head was wetted. BD’s relaunch party in London on Tuesday saw Davids Chipperfield and Adjaye chatting with RIBA presidents past, present, and perhaps future in the form of Paul Hyett, George Ferguson and Richard Saxon. Bob Allies and Graham Morrison were among those who praised the ...

  • Opinion

    So macho

    2004-05-07T00:00:00Z

    Sarah Wigglesworth’s experience of machismo (In Practice April 23), I am happy to say, is not universal. In 40 years, I have been fortunate enough to meet courtesy in most situations, including on site. As the student working with me keeps pointing out, how other people treat one depends largely ...