Architecture needs a ‘rinse and repeat’ approach
We should move away from the idea of architecture as a finite product and instead embrace ongoing maintenance for our creations, argues Toko Andrews
By Toko Andrews 30 August 2023 1,996 Views
We should move away from the idea of architecture as a finite product and instead embrace ongoing maintenance for our creations, argues Toko Andrews
By Anna Highfield 4 August 2023 1,275 Views
Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) has runveiled designs for a 210m-tall office tower in Xi’an, the capital of China's central Shaanxi Province
By Anna Highfield 31 July 2023 2,886 Views
DLG Architects has won planning permission for two major masterplans in Leeds
By Fran Williams 20 July 2023 8,888 Views
Timber Development UK, working with Waugh Thistleton Architects, has released Timber Typologies, a free downloadable ‘beginner’s guide’ for various timber solutions. Fran Williams speaks to Waugh Thistleton associate Alastair Ogle to find out what it’s all about
By Pamela Buxton and Bruce Tether 22 June 2023 5,845 Views
We crunch the numbers to provide a revealing snapshot of a post-pandemic architecture profession
By Hattie Hartman 21 June 2023 3,920 Views
Architype associate director Ann-Marie Fallon has been named this year’s AJ100 Sustainability Champion
By Hattie Hartman 21 June 2023 835 Views
A post-occupancy evaluation of a new neighbourhood at the Olympic Park, using a bespoke methodology developed by HawkinsBrown, has been named AJ100 Sustainability Initiative of the year
By Greg Pitcher 16 May 2023 17,967 Views
A council chief has fired a broadside at the architecture profession, using an RIBA awards-night speech to lay into it over diversity, sustainability and pay
By Anna Highfield 27 April 2023 2,886 Views
Yasmeen Lari, Pakistan’s first female architect, has won the 2023 RIBA Royal Gold Medal, widely regarded as one of the highest awards in architecture
By Jonny Anstead 13 March 2023 6,658 Views
In the face of bizarre conspiracy theories, those of us who argue for walkable neighbourhoods will have to up our game and explain ourselves better, argues Jonny Anstead