LondonOn wins Bergen shipyard contest
AT Editor2022-05-11T12:01:10+01:00A team of British architects has unveiled its competition-winning masterplan for Bergen’s Inner Laksevåg district.
A team of British architects has unveiled its competition-winning masterplan for Bergen’s Inner Laksevåg district.
Adam Richards Architects has designed a floating cheese restaurant in the Paddington Basin, featuring a patinated metal roof based on James Stirling's Bookshop Pavilion in Venice.
Morris+Company and Freehaus have won a competition to redevelop the Thames-side school with their design for a russet extension enclosing a courtyard and framing views to the river and St Paul’s Cathedral.
Wright & Wright Architects has skilfully reworked London’s Museum of the Home, revitalising and extending the assemblage of 300-year-old almshouses the interiors museum occupies.
Hannah Corlett is hopeful that coronavirus will force us to question old habits and embrace a more flexible and frugal way of life.
An AT technical webinar on how to correctly specify and install zinc facades and roofs is taking place on Wednesday 30th June.
A concept based on the restorative qualities of "forest-bathing" has been named the winner of the first Davidson Prize, an ideas competition asking entrants to consider the impact of the pandemic on how we live and work.
The 2021 Serpentine Pavilion by Sumayya Vally of Johannesburg-based studio Counterspace splices together forms taken from meeting spaces – from bookshops to markets and places of worship – significant to migrant communities in London.
A reflective aluminium block designed by Barozzi Veiga for Ravensbourne University’s Institute for Creativity and Technology is the first building to complete at the Greenwich Peninsula Design District in London.
Tsuruta Architects has added an entirely timber extension to a 1950s terrace in south London, using a flat-pack of over one thousand wooden parts assembled onsite like a piece of Ikea furniture.
Imagine what could be achieved with a state-funded programme of Architectural Aid, writes editor Isabel Allen, if architecture were treated not just a commodity for sale but as a fundamental human right.