All Opinion articles – Page 66
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Opinion
London's tall buildings bloopers
There’s lots of great new architecture in London but you wouldn’t know it to look at the skyline, says Hank Dittmar
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Opinion
Britain's urban literacy is a national scandal
Critic Jonathan Glancey laments the loss of city making skills
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Opinion
Thanks to the EU, architects can work in more places than ever before
Ben Flatman looks at the implications of Brexit for architects’ freedom of movement
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Opinion
The Green Belt is protected for a reason
Gillian Darley says a visit to Cairo or Delhi shows what can go wrong
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Opinion
If we can't even get common people to a debate on privilege, how will we get them to study architecture?
With its provocative format, Turncoats promised to ‘rugby tackle’ fundamental issues and turn deferential debates on their head. It caused a buzz in London. This week it moves to Canada and Serbia. Michael Badu assesses its most explosive event yet and asks whether, beyond the hype, it really offers something ...
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Opinion
Collaboration and research are key to the survival of the profession
Architects must offer clients meaningful evidence - and the RIBA should be drawing it together, says Ben Derbyshire
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Opinion
You can't just build a railway and hope the Northern Powerhouse will succeed
Designing attractive places where people will want to build a life must be a critical part of the government’s plan, says Eleanor Jolliffe
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Opinion
We need to work much harder to retain women - and publishing gender pay rates would be a good start
Legislation is coming but most practices are too small to be affected. The RIBA should step in to change that, argues Grimshaw partner Mark Middleton
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Opinion
London won’t find the answer until it asks the right question
House prices in the capital have risen 45% under Boris Johnson. Infrastructure is at breaking point. We urgently need to decide what kind of city we want London to be, says Julia Park
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Opinion
Time to stop going down the garden path and come up with a strategy
Solving the housing crisis is not just a numbers game: it requires proactive planning. Jeff Nottage urges the government to abandon opportunism and get serious
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Opinion
A towering mess that the government has the power - but not the will - to address
We must act to shape the market or we’ll have a skyscraper glut and still no affordable housing, warns Hank Dittmar
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Opinion
Why so many English picnics happen in motorway lay-bys
The people’s exclusion from Arcadia should be a national scandal, says Leon Krier. Instead we seem happy to settle for a handkerchief-size garden
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Opinion
You've got to laugh or you'd cry
Gillian Darley aims to cheer with her trawl through the funniest architecture in literature
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Opinion
Lessons from competitive Paris
London’s next mayor would do well to look across the Channel, says Amanda Baillieu
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Opinion
What Brexit might mean for architects
It’s hard to separate the facts from the rhetoric, but on balance the profession will probably be best served by the UK remaining in the EU, says BD editor Thomas Lane
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Opinion
Watch out, planners: You're in the government's crosshairs
Architect-turned-developer Crispin Kelly detects the stamping foot of a crotchety minister demanding, ‘More houses, or else’
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Opinion
Why no one has a good word to say for the Housing & Planning Bill
The government could learn a lot from the history of urbanism in Paris, London - and China, argues Eleanor Jolliffe
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Opinion
Just because the Powell & Moya site is available doesn't mean it's the right place for a concert hall
London should think carefully about where to build its newest cultural venue. And Leon Krier’s Regent’s Park proposal beats Boris’s commercial opportunism, says Hank Dittmar
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Opinion
Ethical professionalism: Taking advantage of diminishing state intervention
As the RIBA begins its hunt for a new chief executive, Ben Derbyshire assesses the future of the profession at a critical point in its history