All Features articles – Page 156
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Features
Banking on international markets
Tales of a different recession from 1982, when borrowing was also a big issue for architectural start-ups such as that of Robin Spence and Robin Webster
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Features
Dot to dot: 27 February 2009
Connect the dots, name the building and send us your answer by 10am on Wednesday March 4 for a chance to win a copy of London’s Changing Riverscape: Panoramas from London Bridge to Greenwich by Charles Craig, Graham Diprose & Mike Seaborne
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Features
Dot to dot result: February 20
This week’s winner is Michael Dahlhausen of Marchini Curran Associates in Nottingham, who identified Arata Isozaki’s art museum in Gunma, Japan
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Features
Inspiration begins at home
Can’t afford to take staff on a three-day break to an exotic foreign location? Never mind, says Keith Bradley of Fielden Clegg Bradley Studios. The creative juices flow just as well at home.
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Features
Dealing with redundancy
If you're facing redundancy where can you turn to for help? Emily Cadman looks at the practicalities of the redundancy procedure and where to get advice.
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Features
Retirement and peace of mind
In Practice, December 19, we featured a question by a reader considering winding up their practice and asking about organising a 12-year run-off professional indemnity insurance.
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Features
How do a make a saving on my indemnity insurance?
While I study for a postgraduate qualification, I want to do a small amount of self-employed architectural work to provide an income of about £5,000.
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Features
Foster’s familiar tune
“Are we ruthless or just consistent?” Foster pondered in a BD interview that described him as the first architect since Lutyens to have achieved “acclaimed buildings and a large and expanding workload”
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Features
How can I cut the number of partners at my firm?
Times at my business are tough and I need to look at reducing partner head count. How do I go about this?
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Features
Dot to Dot: 20 February 2009
Name the building for the chance to win a copy of Green Design by Marcus Fairs.
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Features
Dot to dot result: February 13
The winner of last week’s competition was Yvonne Munday of Scott Brownrigg in Guildford, who identified Eero Saarinen’s terminal at Washington Dulles Airport.
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Features
Pioneer spirit meets polyurethane
We look back to the heady days of the 1970s energy crisis, when hand-crafting your own home out of super-insulating foam was the way to go in Wisconsin
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Features
Will investment in primary schools help small practices find work?
This month four experts consider an issue facing practices in the education sector
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Features
A round-up of the latest education projects
Krishna-Avanti Primary:Cottrell & Vermeulen's temple of learning The first voluntary-aided Hindu School in the UK is being designed by Cottrell & Vermeulen Architecture. Krishna-Avanti Primary School is in the borough of Harrow, north London, which has the country’s highest Hindu population outside of Leicester. The practice engaged in consultation to ...
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Features
Sheppard Robson’s Churchill College was built to last the course
Sheppard Robson’s Churchill College was dubbed safe and even bland in 1959, but 50 years on 6A Architects is revisiting the original courtyard-based design for its new hall of residence
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Features
Skanska Infrastructure Development’s Steve Cooper on BSF
When it comes to schools, Steve Cooper of Skanska Infrastructure Development, has enjoyed an educational transformation with his BSF involvement in Bristol
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Features
RIBA Bookshops’ pick of the best books on education
Helen Newman, education director of Glenn Howells Architects reviews three books on education covering subjects from architectural theory to practical use at every level of learning
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Features
We're interested in shaping architecture at its conception
Editor’s letter: Updated BD Magazine takes an indepth look at the profession