On trend: internal glazing
AT Editor2022-07-04T10:07:11+01:00Ben Brocklesby, Director at Origin, discusses the growing demand for internal glazing, how to achieve the ‘look’, and the launch of an exciting new product.
Ben Brocklesby, Director at Origin, discusses the growing demand for internal glazing, how to achieve the ‘look’, and the launch of an exciting new product.
We did it. Architecture Today readers have raised more than £50,000 for the Kharkiv School of Architecture (KhSA) in Ukraine, writes editor Isabel Allen.
Matte black accessories from Schlüter-Systems deliver a coordinated and modern bathroom aesthetic.
Researcher, writer, urbanist and educator Kat Martindale debunks the misconceptions that prevent architectural practices from undertaking research.
Architect and photographer David Grandorge visits Feilden Fowles latest project, a dining hall with ecclesiastical proportions designed for Homerton College at the University of Cambridge.
Benedetti Architects has been selected to lead the refurbishment of the Royal Institute of British Architects' headquarters at 66 Portland Place, London.
Watch our AT Schüco webinar exploring how we can adapt and improve our existing building stock to meet present and future needs.
An AT webinar with The Rooflight Company exploring ways of improving the energy efficiency of our historic building stock is taking place on Wednesday 8th June.
Danny Fitzgerald, National Architectural Manager at Schüco UK, and Architecture Today’s Technical Editor John Ramshaw discuss the increasingly important role Cradle to Cradle design and certification is playing in the manufacture and use of the company's facade, window and door systems.
Crossrail – now known as the Elizabeth line – has finally opened to passengers, stretching 118km to connect Reading and Heathrow in the west through central London to Shenfield and Abbey Wood in the east.
Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron has completed its much-anticipated new campus for the Royal College of Art in Battersea, south west London.
As KAAN Architecten rounds off its two-decade transformation of the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, Louis Mayes gives his verdict on the complex insertion of contemporary exhibition and back-of-house spaces with the neo-classical building.