All Interviews articles – Page 28

  • Features

    Jasper conran: The new Wayne hemingway?

    2005-09-16T00:00:00Z

    Fashion guru Jasper Conran is already known for interior design, but with links to the Open House scheme and some heavy hints being dropped, it seems he may be moving into architecture. So do we have another fashion designer architect on our hands?

  • Barrington Billings, the first black person to hold the presidency of the Chartered Institute of Housing
    Features

    Mr precedent

    2005-09-09T00:00:00Z

    Barrington Billings, the first black person to hold the presidency of the Chartered Institute of Housing, spent years championing the cause of black and ethnic minorities. Now he’s giving firms run by them the chance to win public sector work.

  • Jennie Price
    Features

    She’s back

    2005-09-02T00:00:00Z

    Jennie Price, the famously combative former boss of the Construction Confederation, has been absent from the industry for some years. Now she’s returned, accompanied by … a row

  • Brighton developer Josh Arghiros
    Features

    The man who kidnapped Gehry

    2005-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Brighton developer Josh Arghiros is the kind of man who knows what he wants and sets out to get it. And if what he wants happens to be the world’s most famous architect, well … He tells George Hay what happened next.

  • Sir Neville Simms
    Features

    The green knight

    2005-07-29T00:00:00Z

    Sir Neville Simms has made an epic personal journey from vilified motorway contractor to champion of sustainable procurement in the public sector. He tells ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø about his plans.

  • Neil Deely and David Prichard
    Features

    Not the David Prichard show

    2005-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Architectural firm Metropolitan Workshop is not about star architects, even though it has been set up by one of the starriest. We found out why from David Prichard and Neil Deely.

  • Simon Vivian
    Features

    Simon Vivian begins

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    Most of Simon Vivian’s six months in charge of Mowlem have been spent struggling with disastrous projects, boardroom bloodletting and a predecessor who didn’t leave. Now he’s finally ready to do it his way. Tom Broughton finds out what he has in mind.

  • Lord Hunt
    Features

    Lord Hunt

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    John Prescott might have trouble remembering who he is, but safety minister Lord Hunt is determined that the construction industry’s big hitters will take on board what he has to say.

  • Valerie Bragg
    Features

    Head first

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Former headmistress Valerie Bragg has been a leading player in implementing Labour’s schools strategy. Here she tells us about why architecture doesn’t really matter – and how she got on with Norman Foster at the Bexley academy.

  • Henry Pitman
    Features

    Do you want to join my tribe?

    2005-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Henry Pitman is the Eton-educated businessman who founded Tribal as the universal solution to the public sector’s property problems. And he wants you to help him

  • The fact I picked up so many jobs afterwards seems to mean people didn’t think I was to blame. As far as I was concerned, I wasn’t to blame
    Features

    No regrets

    2005-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Nobody knows better than Sir Martin Laing, former chairman of Laing, how a wafer-thin margin can turn into a catastrophic loss. He tells us about how a contract used to be a gentlemen’s agreement and why he wasn’t to blame for that £1 sale.

  • Doing good by stealth
    Features

    Doing good by stealth

    2005-06-03T00:00:00Z

    The new chief executive of the Prince’s Foundation is a quiet American. But Hank Dittmar’s lack of showiness is well suited to a charity that is aiming to slowly and subtly transform urban England.

  • Stars and stripes
    Features

    Stars and gripes

    2005-05-27T00:00:00Z

    When Emcor lambasted its failing UK subsidiary Drake & Scull, US-based boss Frank T MacInnis asked Tony Whale to turn the firm around. Whale has, but he isn’t out of the woods yet. We met the two to discuss their future.

  • Kate's expectations
    Features

    Kate’s expectations

    2005-05-20T00:00:00Z

    When Kate Barker’s report into housing undersupply was published last year, it was greeted with intense public and industry interest – after which nothing much seemed to happen. We found out whether the author was disappointed with her reception

  • Daniel Libeskind
    Features

    Daniel Libeskind

    2005-05-13T00:00:00Z

    As rumours circulate of year-long delays and complete redesigns at Ground Zero, we talk to the man responsible about why his long, bitter struggle with rival architects, the New York press and the site owner (among others) is a sign that things are going pretty well …

  • Chapman’s campaign literature from 1964
    Features

    Goodbye, Mr Chapman

    2005-04-22T00:00:00Z

    Sir Sydney Chapman, the only qualified architect in the House of Commons and the man behind the controversial Portcullis House project, retired from parliament last week after 30 years as a Conservative MP – but not before enjoying a final cuppa in the Commons tearoom

  • Will Alsop
    Features

    Will Alsop

    2005-04-22T00:00:00Z

    To lose three major projects, 50 staff and go into receivership in one year could finish many an architect, but for this man it’s simply a new beginning. He talks to us about his plans for the renamed Alsop & Partners.

  • Thomas Vale
    Features

    Tony’s plans for Thomas

    2005-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Thomas Vale has acquired the reputation of being Britain’s best small contractor. This is of course wrong. It’s really pretty big – and getting bigger. We met the man behind it; Mikael Gothage took his photo

  • City slicker
    Features

    City slicker

    2005-03-24T00:00:00Z

    Ricky Burdett, the London School of Economics’ new professor of architecture and urbanism, is the capital’s leading educator, adviser and ambassador of urban design. We met him to discuss his plans to improve cities across Europe and beyond …

  • The Chalmers & Lyons show
    Features

    The Chalmers & Lyons show

    2005-03-18T00:00:00Z

    Sir Michael Lyons and Lesley Chalmers are in charge of one of the best-kept secrets in regeneration – a public–private venture set up to transform the grimmest areas in England. They are also a great comedy double act.