All Opinion articles – Page 69
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Opinion
Burntwood School Stirling Prize win an underwhelming choice
This year’s Stirling Prize proved an unusual choice, but could it be a political one too, asks Ike Ijeh
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Opinion
The Housing Bill simply doesn’t add up
The new laws will only help people who can already afford to help themselves and does nothing to address the real problems, argues Julia Park
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Opinion
When collaboration works
Mutual respect, like that between Kim Wilkie and Niall McLaughlin at the Natural History Museum, is key for partnerships to flourish, says Gillian Darley
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Opinion
If the Stirling Prize was about sustainability, who would win?
Ahead of next week’s ceremony, Simon Sturgis takes a critical look at the carbon performance of the six finalists
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Opinion
Protesters are wrong to target Neo Bankside and hipsters eating cereal
We should be less worried about gentrification than about the complete failure to provide for communities like Barking Riverside, says Amanda Baillieu
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Opinion
IS's attack on humanity's shared origins exposes the weakness of its ideology
Blowing up Palmyra is about power and money not cultural cleansing, says Eleanor Jolliffe
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Opinion
Is brutalism the new Victoriana?
Do National Trust tours of brutalist icons mark a yearning for the return of 1960s and 70s socialist utopias or is the brutalist revival simply down to fashion?
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Opinion
You’ve got to hand it to post-modernism
It took capitalism and consumer nostalgia to rescue our brutal utopias, says Hank Dittmar
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Opinion
Architects must be allowed to finish what they start
It’s time to end the damaging separation between concept design and delivery architect which was highlighted by the RIBA Client and Architect report, argues Roddy Langmuir
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Opinion
Architecture and freedom – a contested connection
With architectural production becoming ever more beholden to the needs of capital and the building industry, the Royal Academy’s Owen Hopkins introduces a season of events that explores what freedom might mean for architects – and architecture – now and in the future
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Opinion
Fraying at the edge
Barking Riverside? This isolated settlement is neither, finds Gillian Darley
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Opinion
Hodder: Industry values architects for our creativity, passion and technical ability
There is much for the profession to be optimistic about, says Stephen Hodder as he steps down as president of the RIBA
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Opinion
This report on clients is required reading
Rab Bennetts says the RIBA report on clients is a wake-up call for the profession
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Opinion
Flood-proof? Designing against the tide
Our attitude to rising sea levels remains as defensive as ever. With 20% of British homes now at risk, this is a mistake, says Robert Barker
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Opinion
Why aren't architects talking about the migration crisis?
The profession has a vital part to play in addressing the challenges confronting Europe, argues Richard Gatti
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Opinion
Tall buildings: Height vs heritage
London’s lack of a coherent tall buildings policy has led to controversial ‘carbuncles’ such as the Walkie Talkie crowding its skyline – and a further 200 tall towers are proposed for the capital. Ike Ijeh wonders if other old cities offer lessons in how to integrate tall buildings into their ...
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Opinion
The continuing evolution of the BD Architect of the Year Awards
BD editor Thomas Lane explains how the awards have got bigger
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Opinion
Most clients would dispense with architects if they could
Architects have become the whipping boy for clients’ failure to produce great buildings, says Amanda Baillieu
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Opinion
Carbuncle Cup: There but for the grace of God go all of us
Many of the architects nominated for the Carbuncle Cup are also RIBA Award-winning practices. How do talented professionals sometimes get it so badly wrong, asks Eleanor Jolliffe
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Opinion
London's housing problems are beyond the power of market forces to solve
The global pressures shaping London’s built environment now include the Airbnb effect, says Hank Dittmar