Chairman of CABE says government view of architects is 鈥渕isguided鈥 and secures minister鈥檚 support for improved public sector design standards.

Chairman of the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment Sir Stuart Lipton has called on the government to take a more positive attitude to architects, saying that they should be seen as the way to raise standards in public buildings.

Lipton praised British architects as among the best in the world but said: 鈥淭here is this view in government that architects cannot be part of a team.

鈥淚 think that is a misguided view. We need as an industry to pass on the message that architects are not the most expensive part of a team. They are often the most efficient, most imaginative part.鈥

Lipton was speaking last week at a review of CABE鈥檚 first year, attended by arts minister Alan Howarth.

RIBA president Marco Goldschmied, backing Lipton鈥檚 remarks, said there was a 鈥渂lame culture鈥 within government that led ministers to demonise architects.

He said: 鈥淎rchitects are often unfairly blamed by government. Construction minister Nick Raynsford is fond of quoting Portcullis House and the British Library as bad examples of architects鈥 input. But it isn鈥檛 just architects鈥 faults.鈥

Lipton called for architects to be more involved in government projects, adding that the private finance initiative was producing second-rate designs. He said: 鈥淲e know the current wave of PFI hospitals falls short of what we can achieve as a nation. The architecture almost appears to be 1960s in design rather than 2000.鈥

He also accused the NHS of ignoring government guidelines on out-of-town developments. He said: 鈥淚t seems rather strange that government policy on shopping centres is to pull them into towns, whereas health seems to be going out of towns.鈥

Howarth supported Lipton鈥檚 view. 鈥淧ublic sector clients have for too long been incompetent clients. Why should we put up with mediocrity, let alone downright ugliness, of design? It鈥檚 entirely unnecessary, especially in the public sector.鈥

The government is by far the largest construction client in the country, spending 拢24bn a year, a figure expected to rise to 拢30bn following this week鈥檚 spending review.

CABE revealed that it was working with the DSS, the RIBA and the Design Council to develop a brief for 1000 combined job centres and benefits offices. The centres, to be called One Centres, will be rolled out over the next five years.