Lord’s Cricket Ground
Jessica Mairs2021-08-17T15:17:03+01:00WilkinsonEyre's Compton and Edrich stands have opened at Lord’s Cricket Ground ahead of the new season.
WilkinsonEyre's Compton and Edrich stands have opened at Lord’s Cricket Ground ahead of the new season.
David Walker believes architects have a responsibility to articulate an optimistic vision of a future that is more sustainable and less frenetic than the world we live in now.
Architect Stephanie Thum-Bonanno has added a stepped brick extension to her east London home, introducing vertical oak fins that frame views out to the garden.
Join us for our live AT webinar in partnership with Schüco at 10.00am on Wednesday 25th August, as speakers from Make Architects, OMA and Wright & Wright explore the future of sustainable, multitasking façades.
The Greenwich Design District, designing a new part of the city and the distinction between delivering a characterful masterplan of separate parts and building an architectural zoo.
Moxon Architects has designed a new farm shop to sit alongside the original buildings at Durslade Farm, the Somerset outpost of the international art gallery Hauser & Wirth. Graham Bizley takes a look.
According to the glossy renders, the Marble Arch Mound was to be a lush green hill offering visitors spectacular views of Hyde Park. But the reality turned out to be rather different, writes Amanda Baillieu.
Being based in the Welsh countryside allows Sarah Featherstone to focus on projects that respond directly to the ecological and climate crisis and tackle rural isolation.
Richard Parr Associates has restored a cluster of farm buildings, transforming them into a bedroom suites, a restaurant and a swimming pool for The Newt boutique hotel in Somerset.
Coffey Architects has replaced a 1930s cottage on the north Devon coast with a house that fits happily with its neighbours but makes a big statement inside, finds Richard Weston.
Cove Ridge, the relationship between architecture and photography, riffs on post-modernism and the joys of cinematic space.
For Pedro Gil, architecture is a platform to give a voice to disenfranchised groups, push for positive social change and solve problems in creative and unexpected ways.