Sourcing custom canopies
AT Editor2025-08-27T09:15:40+01:00Sharchs Corporation explains why itself, Architectural Canopies, and D8 Products stand out as the leading suppliers of custom aluminium canopies in 2025.
Sharchs Corporation explains why itself, Architectural Canopies, and D8 Products stand out as the leading suppliers of custom aluminium canopies in 2025.
AT chats to Emma McNicholas and Chris Shiels, directors at OOBE – one of a select band of landscape architects who have taken part in the 2025 Regenerative Architecture Index.
Feilden+Mawson has completed the restoration and reinterpretation of Norwich Castle Keep, returning the Norman landmark to its medieval configuration while enhancing public access and facilities.
Through philosophy, design and community led projects, Leela Keshav explores what it means to treat citizenship as a verb, and explains how this can support us in reshaping cities through participation, accountability and care.
Hugh Broughton Architects delivers upgraded public toilets beneath Parliament Street as part of Westminster City Council’s £12.7 million programme to improve facilities across the borough.
Owain Williams Architects turns a disused garage site in Finsbury Park into a modest but purposeful office for the Stroud Green Housing Co-operative.
Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt’s redevelopment of Charterhouse School’s art and design buildings brings together existing facilities with a new extension, creating a unified centre for creative and technical learning.
Grimshaw has completed a community and education hub at Edmonton EcoPark in North London.
Renzo Piano Building Workshop and Adamson Associates complete the final phase of Shard Quarter with a mixed-use residential tower at London Bridge.
HLW’s circular design for Grant Thornton UK’s new London office has resulted in a 79 reduction in embodied carbon through reuse, low-impact materials and a human-centred approach.
Material Cultures and Studio Gil transform a former council nursery in North London into a thriving community hub built from natural, low-carbon materials.
Glasgow-based artist Edward Bruce and Edinburgh architect Nick O’Neill transform St Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral with an Eduardo Paolozzi-inspired colourful installation that draws on the ancient art of bell ringing.