All The Carbuncle Cup articles
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News
Winner of 2018 Carbuncle Cup announced
The award no one wants to win goes to town centre regeneration project in Stockport
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Features
Carbuncle Cup 2018 shortlist unveiled
Six of Britain’s worst buildings in the running for architecture’s wooden spoon
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: Beckley Point, Plymouth by Boyes Rees Architects
Vegas heads to Plymouth by way of New York with a student housing block that has the dubious honour of being the west country’s tallest building
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: 20 Ambleside Avenue, London by Pace Jefford Moore Architects
This house in south London looks more like an electricity substation than a home
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: 15 Clerkenwell Close by Groupwork & Amin Taha Architects
Ruin porn makes its debut in Clerkenwell
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: The Iron Foundry, by Feilden Clegg Bradley
Football’s not coming home but in Bristol, Darth Vader is
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: 69 Highgate High St, London by Birds Portchmouth Russum Architects
Scheme waved through on appeal by same planning inspector who approved 2013 Carbuncle Cup winner
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News
Carbuncle Cup 2018: Call for entries
BD kicks off the contest to find Britains worst building completed in the last year
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News
Carbuncle Cup 2017 winner announced
This year the award no one wants to win goes to an office development in London’s Victoria
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News
Carbuncle Cup: The people's choice revealed
The winner of this year’s Carbuncle Cup won’t be known until tomorrow, but BD readers have made their feelings very clear. The overwhelming majority of you said you think architecture’s wooden spoon should be handed to Preston railway station ’s new entrance. A thumping 78% ...
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Features
Carbuncle Cup 2017 shortlist unveiled
Six of Britain’s worst buildings in the running for architecture’s wooden spoon
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: Park Plaza London Waterloo by ESA Architecture
This conversion of a government department into a hotel doesn’t quite hit the spot
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: The Curve, Slough by Bblur Architecture and CZWG
Brave or foolish; the Curve tries to put the heart back into Slough
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: Circus West, Battersea Power Station, London by Simpson Haugh
The first completed phase of the controversial project obscures the very thing it was supposed to preserve
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: Tara Theatre, London by Aedas
Is shoehorning a 100 seat theatre into a corner shop a brilliant piece of miniaturisation or a case of trying to squeeze a quart into a pint pot?
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Features
Carbuncle Cup: 8 Somers Road, Malvern by Vivid Architects
An unfortunate juxtaposition of old and new