All Case studies articles – Page 5

  • BIM was used to manage supply-chain contributions on the Francis Crick Institute
    Features

    Who wins with BIM?

    2016-03-31T06:30:00Z

    If your firm isn’t using BIM level 2 by Monday, then it can’t be considered for public sector work. So what does the requirement mean for the industry - and who will be the winners and the losers?

  • Hiscox ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø in York
    Features

    Hiscox building: Makes you stare

    2016-03-24T06:00:00Z

    Make Architects’ Hiscox ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø in York is a triumphant fusion of heritage and modernity that has at its heart a spectacular foyer of swirling concrete staircases and balconies - oh, and a rocket from the former Soviet arsenal

  • The European Commission in Brussels sets the procurement rules behind the OJEU framework
    Features

    EU procurement: Drawing lines

    2016-03-17T06:00:00Z

    Architects have played down the effect that a vote for Britain to leave the EU this summer would have on the profession, but its impact on procurement could make a big difference

  • 7 Air Street
    Features

    7 Air Street: A breath of fresh air

    2016-03-10T06:00:00Z

    Barr Gazetas’ retrofit of a 1920s office block on Air Street in central London has resulted in the first BREEAM ‘outstanding’ rating for a listed building

  • The hoUSe concept is a contemporary reinterpretation of the traditional terraced house
    Features

    Prefab housing: Here’s one we made earlier

    2016-03-02T06:00:00Z

    A new range of low-cost prefabricated housing solutions is being rolled out across the country with the potential to help tackle Britain’s affordable housing crisis

  • TFL
    Features

    Cycle lanes: On yer bikes

    2016-02-24T11:00:00Z

    London’s £4bn Roads Modernisation Plan aims to radically redesign the way we travel through the capital’s streets

  • Thrale Almshouses
    Features

    Almshouses: Charity begins at home

    2016-02-17T10:36:00Z

    Renovating an almshouse site in Streatham, south London, meant a balancing act between upgrading outmoded 1930s housing and staying true to the Edwardian aesthetic

  • holycross
    Features

    Holy Cross School: A class of its own

    2016-02-12T06:00:00Z

    Cullinan Studio’s prefabricated school in Swindon extracts spatial and architectural delight from a lean, compact template and answers today’s challenge of how we can build more schools for less money, while maintaining design quality

  • The new Grande Stade de Lyon is encased in concrete walls with narrow openings to mimic a medieval fortress
    Features

    Grande Stade de Lyon: Stadium Franglais

    2016-02-03T06:00:00Z

    Olympique Lyonnais’ new £340m home, designed by Populous, will host Euro 2016 matches this summer. But is it more typical of English stadium design than its continental counterparts?

  • The last train carrying the general public left Aldwych underground station on the evening of 30 September 1994, 87 years after the station first opened to the public
    Features

    Underground London: Secrets of the deep

    2016-01-27T06:00:00Z

    Beneath the streets of London lies a little known world of labyrinthine tunnels, disused tube stations, underground rivers and even a Post Office railway

  • Dalston Lane project
    Features

    Dalston Lane: Tall Timber

    2016-01-20T07:00:00Z

    At 33m high, a Hackney apartment block is set to become the world’s tallest cross-laminated timber building

  • Frampton Park Baptist Church
    Features

    Frampton Park Baptist Church

    2016-01-13T07:00:00Z

    A long way to heaven: A Baptist church in Hackney, east London, has broken with the archetypes of church design to place community facilities, a cafe, creche and offices at the congregational heart of the building - prayers go on up on the third floor

  • Heathrow
    Features

    Projects for 2016: Heathrow airport

    2016-01-07T06:00:00Z

    The wrangling over a third runway is one of the longest-running farces in recent British political history

  • Elbphilharmonie? Concert Hall
    Features

    Projects for 2016: Elbphilharmonie​ Concert Hall

    2016-01-06T06:00:00Z

    This £617m Herzog de Meuron project was originally costed at less than £60m and scheduled to complete in 2010

  • Athens
    Features

    Projects for 2016: Greek National Opera House

    2016-01-05T06:00:00Z

    With a crippled state apparatus and a national debt standing at almost 180% of GDP, one might be forgiven for thinking that a £500m new opera house might not be uppermost on the Greek government’s mind

  • Abu Dhabi Louvre
    Features

    Projects for 2016: Abu Dhabi Louvre

    2016-01-04T06:00:00Z

    While originally scheduled for 2012, the Louvre’s first museum outside of Paris should be worth the wait

  • wtc
    Features

    Projects for 2016: World Trade Center Transportation Hub

    2015-12-31T06:00:00Z

    With its original cost nearly doubled to £2.3bn, the almost decade-late World Trade Center Transportation Hub will become the world’s most expensive station

  • Tate modern
    Features

    Projects for 2016: Tate Modern extension

    2015-12-30T06:00:00Z

    Plagued by spiralling delays and ballooning costs, the extension to the world’s most popular modern art museum should finally open this summer

  • Rio Olympic Park
    Features

    Projects for 2016: Rio Olympics

    2015-12-29T06:00:00Z

    The sporting spectacle will return in 2016 with some typically impressive architecture

  • fenchurch
    Features

    The projects that shaped 2015

    2015-12-18T06:00:00Z

    It’s been a bumper year for both major and more modest buildings, from the Walkie Talkie to Vaudeville Court - but are they wonders or blunders?