Dispatches from OOBE
Jason Sayer2025-08-28T11:40:01+01:00AT 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.
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.
Gradolí & Sanz Arquitectes has completed a nature-centred Montessori school in Paterna, Spain, where architecture and landscape merge to create an immersive and tactile environment for early learning.
In Hampshire, the renewal of a celebrated modernist icon, formerly Mountbatten House, integrates more than 20,000 new plants alongside new commercial workspace.
Asif Khan unveils a 170m-long meandering boardwalk as a celebration of history, colour and nature at the heart of Canada Water's transformation of Canada Dock.
Holt Architecture and George King Architects have completed an elevated ‘sky garden’ at a secondary school in east London.
Nex– Architecture and Xylotek have completed a series of striking lattice timber pavilions at Regent’s Place in London
Watch our webinar, in partnership Medite Smartply, exploring best practice in designing multifunctional outdoor space.
Yusti Herrera of Ian Chalk Architects explains how revisiting historic methods of reading the landscape informed the practice’s approach to building a new house in collaboration with RA Studio in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on the Cornish coast
Working as a landscape architect within the context of a global climate crisis can often feel frustrating, writes ADP's Head of Landscape Claire Hunt, reflecting on her time at COP26. The buzzwords flying around at COP26 all link to responses which are fundamental to a landscape architect’s role.
Building Surman Weston completes a cookery school with a vital mission
Building Review
The Newt is a Somerset estate recast as a hotel and garden-themed visitor attraction. Graham Bizley takes a tour
Viewpoint
With flooding set to increase almost everywhere people live, water must become central to our thinking about architecture and urbanism, says Iñaki Alday