All articles by Graham Bizley – Page 2
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Building Study
In Detail: Resource Centre, Grizedale, Cumbria
Architect: Sutherland Hussey Architects Structural Engineer: Burgess Roughton
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Building Study
Extracting a building’s essence
For BD working details, I try to develop a drawing that conveys depth of technical information while also containing an essence of what the whole building is about.
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Building Study
It’s all in the details
Graham Bizley has been producing working details for BD since 2004. He has covered more than 90 buildings, and 40 are now included in his new book, Architecture in Detail. Here Graham explains why detailing is such an important part of the architectural process
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Building Study
Alison Brooks Architects makes wood work in Wandsworth
Alison Brooks’ twin timber-clad Herringbone Houses set south London shimmering
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Building Study
Focus House, London by Bere Architects
In tune with last month’s Stern Review, a house squeezed between Victorian terraces in north London takes its own action to combat climate change, observes Graham Bizley
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Review
Luxury through economy
Ullmayer and Sylvester are adept at producing the most from small projects
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Building Study
Poetic justice
Terry Pawson's west London office building combines a redundant court building, arts and crafts detail and modern theory to imposing effect
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Building Study
Getting down to earth
A new arts centre by Rafael Moneo reflects Spain's rugged landscape on the outside, while giving a home to painter José Beulas's collection of 20th century art within.
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Review
The public face of David Adjaye
A new show draws on non-western sources to highlight changes in the way we interact.
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Technical
In detail 51: Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse, Heathrow Airport, London
Light sculpture: Collaboration between light artist Chris Levine, architect Softroom and the Virgin Atlantic Airways design department
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Building Study
Light industry
On the week of its founding partner’s memorial BD visits Feilden Clegg Bradley’s Bennet’s Courtyard in Merton and finds housing for the future inspired by the industrial past
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Technical
In detail 50: Spencer Street Station, Melbourne, Australia
A billowing roof of shimmering zinc-coated aluminium has been unfurled across the platforms of Spencer Street Station. The undulating profile is designed to passively extract diesel fumes without the need for a costly mechanical system.
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Building Study
In Detail 49: House at Dalguise, Perthshire, Scotland
Architect: Arc ArchitectsClay-based materials have been used extensively in a new low-cost house in Fife with a strong sustainability agenda. The house has a simple rectangular plan built off a concrete raft foundation. Most of the accommodation is on the ground floor with a bedroom and storage attic concealed in ...
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Technical
In detail 47: Social housing in Vallecas, Madrid
Architect Feilden Clegg BradleyM&E engineer: Max FordhamEnvironmental engineer: EMMA SL
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Technical
St Paul’s scrubs up a treat
Graham Bizley describes the painstaking process of cleaning and restoring the cathedral’s interior
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Technical
In detail 46: Wembley Stadium arch, London
The Wembley arch spans 315m across the new stadium and is visible across London. It was built in segments flat on the ground and hoisted up into position, where it is now held on cables ready for the roof structure to be hung from it.
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Technical
In detail 45 : Galleria West Fashion Mall, Seoul, South Korea
The Galleria was a dull shopping centre in Seoul with blind concrete walls. UNStudio and Arup Lighting have transformed it into a glowing light box with messages and patterns of colour moving around.
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Technical
The Rem & Cecil show
They’re architecture’s most famous double act. Architect Rem Koolhaas and structural engineer Cecil Balmond have built showstopping buildings from Portugal to LA. Graham Bizley asked them about their 18-year marriage
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Building Study
Work the angles
Koolhaas’s startling new concert hall has touched down in the Portuguese city of Porto. We take a journey through the Casa da Musica and discovers a triumph of structural quirks and visual treats
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Technical
Shifting the graveyard
A project in Venice conquers the sea to expand San Michele cemetery.
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