Architects & design Focus – Page 10

  • Specifier opener
    Features

    Guy's Hospital Tower refurbishment: Nurse, the screens

    2011-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Penoyre & Prasad is giving Guy’s Hospital Tower – a brutalist eyesore in central London – a new £25m facade. But, says Ike Ijeh, it will take more than a clever bit of cosmetic surgery to turn this one into a looker

  • news analysis
    Features

    Step 1: Standardise your public building

    2011-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Efficiency has long eluded the construction industry - but now the government is demanding cuts in costs of up to 20%. So any company wanting public sector work had better think up some pretty clever ways to help make that happen

  • Ab Rogers
    Features

    Remixed: Ab Rogers interview

    2011-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Ab Rogers, son of Richard, flopped at school, became a hippy, and is, by his own father’s judgment, ’pretty crazy’. None of that stops him being a sought after UK designer trusted with designs for the likes of Pizza Express and the Fat Duck. Meet a true individual

  • Architects in recession
    Features

    Architects and recession: Battered, bruised and broke

    2011-02-11T00:00:00Z

    Architects have taken a beating over the past two years, but have they suffered any permanent damage? How are the UK’s top listed practices faring, and what impact is the recession having on design quality?

  • John Drew Issue05
    Features

    John Drew: The new power house

    2011-02-04T00:00:00Z

    For years, John Drew has been best known as the architect who advised on the masterplan for Battersea Power Station. Now he’s joined forces with Jack Pringle and has a possible £300m worth of schemes on the horizon. Emily Wright finds him in bullish mood

  • Pudding Mill Pumping Station
    Features

    New industrialists: Waste and power station design

    2011-01-14T00:00:00Z

    Dark satanic mills were once, in fact, exuberant celebrations of technology and design. Now Cabe’s new guidelines on power stations and waste facilities will try to put the architecture back into industry

  • Features

    Five projects in 2011 worth getting excited about

    2011-01-07T00:00:00Z

    The public sector fairy tale is well and truly over - but that doesn’t mean that work in 2011 will completely dry up. Here are five of the most exciting projects of the year ahead.

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    Features

    Jakob + Macfarlane's Lyon office: The cube with a hole

    2011-01-07T00:00:00Z

    Cuboid buildings may be all the rage but Jakob + Macfarlane’s provocative office block in Lyon is one of a kind

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    Features

    Fancy a half at your heritage local?

    2011-01-07T00:00:00Z

    Historic buildings need to earn their keep these days, whether they’re in the City or the shires. They can’t all be museums or art galleries though, and the new preservers of our built heritage might surprise you

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    Features

    Make's £100m Cube: Birmingham cubed

    2010-11-12T00:00:00Z

    The Second City’s Jewellery Quarter inspired the facade of Make’s astonishing Cube development. But as with any box of jewels, its real treasures are inside

  • Wilkinson Eyre
    Features

    Wilkinson Eyre: Twin peaks

    2010-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Ten years ago ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø interviewed a young architectural practice called Wilkinson Eyre. A decade and two Stirling prizes later, we return to ask its principals how it feels to become part of the design establishment - and on the top of their game.

  • London Eye  (Millennium Wheel)
    Features

    Millennium projects: 10 years of good luck

    2010-06-25T00:00:00Z

    From the wobbly Millennium Bridge to the infamous Spinnaker Tower and the runaway success of Tate Modern, fortune smiled on some millennium projects more than others. Ike Ijeh celebrates their 10th anniversary

  • Medals
    Features

    Meddles all round: Prince Charles, Boris and Cabe ...

    2010-05-28T00:00:00Z

    Planning has always been a national regatta for those with oars to stick in, but Charles’ Chelsea fiasco took it to a new level. Sarah Richardson compares him with the other rowers

  • Steven Holl
    Features

    Steven Holl: After Mackintosh

    2010-05-07T00:00:00Z

    For most people in the UK, Steven Holl is the best architect they’ve never heard of. Now he’s tackling the world-famous Glasgow School of Art, that’s about to change

  • Features

    BDP's Peter Drummond: The revolutionary in carpet slippers

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    BDP, Britain’s biggest architect, is better known for quiet competence than daring. But this is the firm that defied Tesco, beat the downturn, expanded into India and Libya and doesn’t give a fig for profit. Chief executive Peter Drummond tells Roxane McMeeken all about it

  • Features

    Peter Morrison: RMJM’s business model

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Peter Morrison, chief executive of Scotland’s best known architect, explains his hiring policies (which include Sir Fred Goodwin), and how RMJM turned itself into an international success story

  • Features

    So long, Sunand: the outgoing RIBA president reflects

    2009-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Regrets? He’s had a few. But then again, too few to mention – unless pushed. Sunand Prasad, the outgoing president of the RIBA gives Dan Stewart a list of his achievements while in office, and fighting Prince Charles was only one of them

  • Harris Sutton scheme
    Features

    Winners revealed at 61st Housing Design Awards

    2009-07-17T08:53:00Z

    Top prize goes to Totnes scheme built by Galliford Try subsidiary in collaboration with the council and a community group

  • All the familiar Libeskind hallmarks are present and correct in the house, from the lurching angles of the exterior to the skewed lighting and beautiful simple finishes
    Features

    Dan's Den: Libeskind goes flatpack

    2009-06-26T00:00:00Z

    If you’ve got a couple of million euros you don’t know what to do with, why not buy your own Libeskind-designed house? Dan Stewart looks at what you get for your money

  • Ruth Reed wants to change people’s views of the RIBA – and becoming the institute’s first woman president isn’t a bad place to start
    Features

    Reed out loud: the RIBA's first woman president

    2009-06-05T00:00:00Z

    Ruth Reed wants to change people’s views of the RIBA – and becoming the institute’s first woman president isn’t a bad place to start. She talks to Dan Stewart about her priorities for her two-year stint, the recession and how she hopes to make the RIBA less London-centric