Ashbocking Houses
Jason Sayer2024-09-26T11:29:55+01:00On the outskirts of Ashbocking in Suffolk, Project Orange has delivered five two-storey dwellings, transforming a site that previously hosted a collection of decaying, semi-industrial buildings.
On the outskirts of Ashbocking in Suffolk, Project Orange has delivered five two-storey dwellings, transforming a site that previously hosted a collection of decaying, semi-industrial buildings.
A landmark timber building designed by Anttinen Oiva Architects forms the latest addition to Helsinki’s historic Market Square.
London studio Mailen Design with the Dover office of Peter Bradford Architects has completed a refined rural dwelling that integrates into the Kentish countryside.
Written by an architect and aimed at architects, Reynaers’ new RIBA-approved curtain walling CPD is titled 'The Best of All Possible Worlds'.
London and Rotterdam-based STORE works with summer school students create a temporary 'log cabin' in London's Granary Square as a venue for public events at London Design Festival.
Sika unveils a 35 per cent lower-carbon roof waterproofing membrane.
Who and what is driving demand for architect-designed warehouses and light industrial space? And how can you get involved? Catch up with our recent webinar to learn about the market for light industrial and logistical centres and find out how architects and clients are delivering new projects.
John Puttick Associates’ sympathetic refurbishment of St Leonard’s Church in Hove, East Sussex, delivers an adaptable community resource marked by a striking timber porch.
In this issue: we publish the inaugural Regenerative Architecture Index, with each practice's answers to the survey available to read. Plus, Engineer Neil Thomas reviews two bamboo domes at the Wildheart Animal Sanctuary on the Isle of Wight and Wildheart COO Lawrence Bates explains why Wildheart has pledged to work exclusively with architects in the RAI.
The inaugural Regenerative Architecture Index (RAI) was launched by Architecture Today and UK Architects Declare in London on 12 September. The event, which was supported by Fabrix and Interface, and attended by leading practitioners, celebrated front-runners from the RAI's Compendium of Best Practice.
At the Regenerative Architecture Index launch party, cofounder of UK Architects Declare Michael Pawlyn discussed ideas, cities, culture, creativity and the future with legendary musician and thinker Brian Eno.
The lemur domes at Wildheart Animal Sanctuary on the Isle of Wight are the first bamboo structures to obtain Building Regulations approval in the UK – part of an ever-evolving experiment in natural materials and regenerative design. Neil Thomas discovers a world that revolves around the needs of wildlife, the environment, and generations to come.