All articles by Martin Spring – Page 9

  • City slicker
    Features

    City slicker

    2005-03-24T00:00:00Z

    Ricky Burdett, the London School of Economics’ new professor of architecture and urbanism, is the capital’s leading educator, adviser and ambassador of urban design. We met him to discuss his plans to improve cities across Europe and beyond …

  • Health buildings should be airy and uplifting like Avanti Architects’ ACAD Centre in west London, pictured – not tightly packed megastructures such as Kier’s Hairmyres PFI hospital
    Features

    Politics and architecture

    2005-03-24T00:00:00Z

    With the anticipation of a general election hanging in the air, we examine the importance of architecture to politicians and the people who vote for them – and takes stock of what Blair has done for the built environment in his eight-year tenure

  • Never mind the gherkin here’s the Geyser
    Features

    Never mind the gherkin here’s the Geyser

    2005-03-18T00:00:00Z

    Jean Nouvel’s Torre Agbar in Barcelona may be smaller than Foster and Partners’ Swiss Re, but it’s more vibrant, colourful – and basic. Martin Spring compares the two

  • The college’s front block has been extended to fill in the ground-floor set-back. A new curtain wall has been added in keeping with the 1960s educational building
    Features

    Canterbury tale

    2005-03-11T00:00:00Z

    Architect Rivington Street Studio has turned a run-of-the-mill repair and maintenance job into an elegant refurbishment for a faded campus of the Kent Institute of Art & Design.

  • Two spacious, light-filled library halls add up to a double-decker temple of learning
    Features

    Lofty ideas, hushed tones

    2005-03-04T00:00:00Z

    In its reinvention of the library as gateway to human knowledge, Bennetts Associates has created a graciously grand yet efficiently low-energy centrepiece to a mixed-use regeneration scheme in Brighton. We took a quiet look around

  • The new Home Office building presents an imposing yet benign frontage to Marsham Street
    Features

    Home improvement

    2005-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The three ugly sisters of Marsham Street are dead – and a much prettier successor has risen from their ashes. We assess the new Farrell-designed home of the Home Office

  • Features

    Europe’s catwalk

    2005-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Norman, Zaha, Daniel, Cesar and many more of world architecture’s signature brands are flocking to Italy to put their stamp on the design capital of Europe

  • At the heart of the Tally Ho Corner development is a light and airy atrium. Its galleries on two floors give access to all the cultural activities on offer and double as theatre foyers
    Features

    Nine into one

    2005-02-04T00:00:00Z

    Is it a home? Is it an office? A shop, a theatre or maybe a bus station? Well, all of the above – and more besides. In fact, Ruddle Wilkinson Architects’ latest development in north London combines nine uses in one building. Martin Spring finds out how.

  • Features

    Art city

    2005-01-28T00:00:00Z

    At Mansilla + Tuñón’s Museum of Contemporary Art, or MUSAC, in northern Spain, bold artistic statements aren’t just reserved for the galleries – just look at the curtain walling

  • Leeds college
    Features

    Check!

    2005-01-21T00:00:00Z

    Yorkshire architect Halliday Clark has created a striking chequerboard rebuke to drab suburban Leeds – and housed 450 members of the city’s teeming student population in the process.

  • Features

    Urban scrawl

    2005-01-14T00:00:00Z

    Will Alsop’s exuberance may have been boxed in at Goldsmiths College, but his playfulness still extrudes itself onto the skyline as a silvery, sculptural squiggle. Martin Spring visits the provocative building on the busy New Cross Road.

  • Feilden: Proud of his practice’s newly completed student residences at Queen Mary, University of London
    ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV

    Feilden: Architect who stretched the boundaries

    2005-01-14T00:00:00Z

    Five years before his death last week while felling an ash tree, the architect Richard Feilden was honoured with an OBE. To receive the award he cycled down the Mall to Buckingham Palace in top hat and tails. The Queen was amused: she chatted to him about his unconventional transport

  • The extended departures lounge is refreshed by a vast window wall, invigorated by soaring slender columns and shielded from two floors of concourses by retail enclosures
    Features

    The jet set

    2004-12-10T00:00:00Z

    In Zürich, a crack Anglo-Swiss project team including Grimshaw and Arup have used imagination and pragmatism to bring glamour back to air travel. Martin Spring takes a tour around the airport that is a bit of a departure.

  • Features

    Seven wonders of islamic design

    2004-12-03T00:00:00Z

    From sandbags to soaring skyscrapers, this year’s Aga Khan Awards are a timely reminder of the diversity of architecture in the Muslim world

  • Features

    Falling water 2004

    2004-12-03T00:00:00Z

    Welcome to the most startling house in Britain … where the front door is a lily pond, the bedrooms are beneath a river and the rooms are separated by waterfalls. Ken Shuttleworth takes us for a paddle around his design and shows us his original concept sketches

  • Features

    A Wellcome sight

    2004-11-26T00:00:00Z

    Hopkins Architects’ latest project is a supersleek HQ for the Wellcome Trust, where researchers can take their breaks in an elegant atrium complete with a giant, cascading glass sculpture

  • Features

    The future is here

    2004-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Los Angeles: Year 2004. Fifteen years earlier than Ridley Scott suggested, Blade Runner architecture has landed on the West Coast in the shape of this transportation HQ.

  • The re-education of Richard Feilden
    Features

    The re-education of Richard Feilden

    2004-11-12T00:00:00Z

    Or what happened when the man whose ‘blood boiled’ at the mere sight of a PFI school decided to have a go at one himself. We write the end-of-project report, Richard Feilden‘s critical self-assessments provide the captions for the photographs

  • Features

    The dream comes true

    2004-11-12T00:00:00Z

    The RIBA has joined forces with the V&A to produced the UK’s first permanent architecture gallery and a library of its prize drawings collection

  • One small, skinny mollusc please
    Features

    Marks Barfield cafe: One small, skinny mollusc please

    2004-11-05T00:00:00Z

    Marks Barfield’s latest scheme is an invertebrate cafe that has attached itself to Birmingham’s Bullring centre – where it is providing weary shoppers with a shell-like retreat