All articles by Will Henley – Page 4
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Wilkinson Eyre wins go-ahead for £35m Mary Rose museum
Wilkinson Eyre has won planning consent to build a £35 million museum to house the Mary Rose, the 16th century warship.
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Aukett Fitzroy Robinson to restructure as UK market deteriorates
Aukett Fitzroy Robinson is to restructure and is poised to make cuts to its workforce, warning, in a statement to the City today, that the UK marketplace had further “deteriorated” in recent weeks.
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Stonehenge win for Denton Corker Marshall
Denton Corker Marshall has landed the long-awaited contract to design Stonehenge visitors centre, BD can reveal.
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BSF delivery likely to bust budget by £10bn
RIBA calls to ditch PFI for building schools as auditor raises concerns
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The Public's interactive gallery closes - before opening - as company goes into administration
The company responsible for managing the ill-fated gallery space in Will Alsop’s The Public has ceased trading and gone into administration.
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Zaha Hadid's Regium Waterfront project
Zaha Hadid Architects has revealed these images of its latest project in Italy, a museum and performing arts centre for the Mediterranean city of Reggio Calabria.
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Gehry, RMJM, Archial and Atkins on shortlist for Glasgow college redevelopment
Frank Gehry and RMJM are to go head-to-head against Archial, Atkins, BDP and a joint team of Hopkins and Bennetts Associates in the race to win one of the largest college redevelopment projects in Europe, a £300 million campus in Glasgow, BD can reveal.
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Architects joining the dole queue up by 544%
RIBA and Arb voice alarm as redundancies and liquidation hit practices worldwide
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London Met architecture department could be forced to cut staff
London Metropolitan University could be forced into cutting staff from its renowned department of architecture after a financial blunder by the institution.
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Birmingham picks winners for £2.4bn BSF scheme
Will Alsop, DSDHA and Associated Architects are among the winners of the government’s biggest Buildings Schools for the Future (BSF) contract, a £2.4 billion project to overhaul 89 secondary schools for Birmingham council.
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Foster, Adjaye lead top names in race to design Washington’s new museum of black history
Norman Foster, David Adjaye, Antoine Predock, Moshe Safdie and IM Pei are among a stellar crop of architects competing to design America’s new museum of black history in Washington DC.
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Lubetkin’s grade I listed Finsbury Health Centre to be sold off to private sector
Berthold Lubetkin’s grade I listed Finsbury Health Centre in Clerkenwell, north London, is set to be sold into private hands after NHS officials this morning rejected a last-ditch effort by Architects for Health to preserve the building’s 70-year association with public healthcare.
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Chris Smith joins Lubetkin centre fight
Former culture secretary Chris Smith this week backed architects and local activists in a last-ditch effort to save Berthold Lubetkin’s pioneering Finsbury Health Centre from being sold to the private sector.
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BSF funding hit as private sector cash dries up
Architects have reacted with alarm after the agency delivering the £45 billion Building Schools for the Future programme admitted worries over its dependence on private finance.
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Allan Murray's new look for Edinburgh's Cowgate
Allan Murray Architects has unveiled its latest mixed-use scheme for the South Bridge and Cowgate district of Edinburgh, which was devastated by fire in December 2002.
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Make under pressure to alter Tottenham masterplan
Make could be forced to alter plans for the redevelopment of Tottenham Hotspur Football Club amid claims that the planned demolition of listed buildings on the site would be “very difficult to justify” under planning rules.
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Atkins to slash 260 British jobs
Design and engineering giant blames worsening recession for redundancy programme
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RIBA pulls out of Accon agreement
The RIBA is set to establish its own accreditation system and register for conservation architects amid claims that the existing system for recognising qualified conservationists is not transparent enough.
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Liverpool to limit number of towers
Tall towers in Liverpool ’s historic centre are set to be restricted to two clusters to help preserve the city’s world heritage status, according to recent guidance drafted by council planning officers.
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Sheppard Robson's Bristol scheme submitted
Sheppard Robson has submitted designs for two new department buildings at the University of Bristol for planning.