All articles by Ike Ijeh – Page 13

  • Hong Kong skyline
    Features

    Can tall buildings ever be sustainable?

    2015-02-25T06:00:00Z

    With debate still raging over the 230 towers lined up to make the London skyline look more like Hong Kong’s, Ike Ijeh looks at whether tall buildings can ever be sustainable

  • Thames View East
    Features

    Council housing: Maybe this time…

    2015-02-18T06:00:00Z

    After years of decline, council house building looks set to enjoy something of a resurgence. But can the new generation of council homes avoid the stigmas of the past?

  • Housebuilders building schools
    Features

    Trading places: Housebuilders building schools

    2015-02-11T06:00:00Z

    With the critical shortage of school places likely to be a hot political topic in the run-up to the general election, Ike Ijeh reports on a growing trend for housebuilders to build the schools themselves

  • SPECIFIC’s first ‘ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø as a power station’ prototype
    Features

    ºÚ¶´ÉçÇøs as power stations

    2015-02-04T06:00:00Z

    Scientists are working hard to make the built environment principally reliant on renewable energy. But with only 10% of their ideas leading to commercial application, a Swansea-based innovation centre aims to turn theory into practice

  • Bristol Life Sceinces
    Features

    Bristol Life Sciences: Split personality

    2015-01-28T06:00:00Z

    Sheppard Robson’s Bristol Life Sciences building comprises a sober street facade that apes Georgian townhouse vernacular; and a dramatic, industrial laboratory elevation that ripples like a giant metallic wave

  • British pavilion, Milan
    Features

    British pavilion, Milan: Get the buzz

    2015-01-21T06:00:00Z

    Much of the site of this year’s British pavilion in Milan will evoke the spirit of British landscapes. But its crowning achievement will be a gigantic recreation of a beehive

  • Sydney Opera House
    Features

    Not on the money: Over budget projects

    2015-01-14T10:00:00Z

    When finally completed last autumn, New York’s One World Trade Center clocked in at a total expense of £2.5bn, making it not only the most expensive skyscraper of all time, but also costing eight times its original budget. But is it the most over budget project ever to be built? ...

  • COD____Alamy
    Features

    BIM: Visualisation technology

    2015-01-07T09:14:00Z

    Software used in the gaming industry is being integrated within a BIM platform to give enhanced architectural visualisation - offering designers a mind-bending simulation capacity

  • Whitmore Park Primary School
    Features

    Projects 2014 review: part 3

    2014-12-19T06:00:00Z

    ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø takes a look back at the completed projects that impressed in 2014

  • Heathrow Airport Queen’s Terminal 2
    Features

    Projects 2014 review: part 2

    2014-12-18T06:00:00Z

    Two more completed projects that impressed in 2014 - the British Museum and Heathrow’s T2

  • Manchester Library
    Features

    Projects 2014 review: part 1

    2014-12-17T13:18:00Z

    ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø takes a look back at the completed projects that impressed in 2014

  • 1WTC
    Features

    The rising: World Trade Center

    2014-12-05T06:00:00Z

    The completion of the £2.4bn One World Trader Center is a milestone in the painstaking redevelopment of the former Ground Zero site in New York. But with two towers and Santiago Calatrava’s vast station still under construction, there’s plenty of work yet to be done.

  • Magdalen College Library
    Features

    Magdalen College Library: The great unknowns

    2014-11-26T06:00:00Z

    Refurbishment projects are infamous for their unforeseen difficulties - like the 100 bodies that had to be dug out of the ground before work could begin on the renovation of Magdalen College Library

  • 2._The_Fondation_Louis_Vuitton______Iwan_Baan
    Features

    BIM architecture: The vision thing

    2014-11-19T06:00:00Z

    BIM isn’t normally seen as a design tool but increasingly it can influence what a building looks like. We explore the possibilities and dangers of BIM-inspired architecture

  • Sea Containers House
    Features

    Sea Containers House: Ahoy there!

    2014-11-12T06:00:00Z

    Chosen as a ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø ‘blunder’ more times than any other building, Sea Containers House has undergone an extensive salvage operation by TP Bennett. So, how successful is it?

  • Pegasus Academy in Thornton Heath, north Croydon
    Features

    Croydon’s capital works programme: Educating Croydon

    2014-11-05T06:00:00Z

    With one of the fastest growing populations in London, Croydon is set for a flurry of development over the next five years. But will the borough be able to meet demand for school places?

  • Pheonix Island
    Features

    Horrific architecture: Part 3

    2014-10-31T06:00:00Z

    Continuing our Halloween tribute to the most gruesome building designs around the globe, here’s the third of our three part mini-series

  • Wanda Cultural City Tourism & Exhibition Centre
    Features

    Horrific architecture: Part 2

    2014-10-30T06:00:00Z

    Continuing our Halloween tribute to the most gruesome building designs around the globe, here’s the second of our three part mini-series

  • White Sails Hospital, Tunisia
    Features

    Horrific architecture: Part 1

    2014-10-29T06:00:00Z

    Dim the lights and get ready to hide behind the sofa. It’s the return of ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø’s Halloween tribute to the most gruesome building designs around the globe

  • LVMH Foundation
    Features

    LVMH Foundation for Creation by Frank Gehry

    2014-10-27T11:32:00Z

    Frank Gehry brings his futuristic architecture to suburban Paris with a privately funded art gallery