• Pretty pylons can add character to England’s industrial landscape | Letters

    Pretty pylons can add character to England’s industrial landscape | Letters
    New designs mean the structures don’t necessarily have to be eyesores, writes John Dinneen. Plus letters from Holly Nicholson and Matt AtkinsonThe photo published with your article (‘There’ll be no countryside left’: Opposition to pylons puts UK carbon targets at risk, 3 August) shows a row of traditional lattice tower pylons. These types of pylons are used all over the UK and generally regarded as ugly by many people, especially if they live near them.However, in 2011, t
  • Sydney’s Yellamundie library among the world’s most beautiful as finalists for annual award revealed

    Liverpool council’s new public building includes public art gallery spaces and a Stem centreFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastA public building in the heart of Sydney’s south-west is one of the most beautiful new libraries in the world, according to the international arbiters of temples to literature.Liverpool council’s new library, which opened in December last year as part of the Yellamundie Civic
  • Total bollards: the iconic ‘eco-Blade Runner’ roundabout that became a grim £132m ‘abomination’

    Total bollards: the iconic ‘eco-Blade Runner’ roundabout that became a grim £132m ‘abomination’
    Boasting hovering haloes and futuristic forests, Old Street roundabout was meant to be a shining beacon for Britain’s very own Tech City. Instead, we have120 hefty bollards and paving built to deter rough sleepersComputer-generated PR images often outshine reality, but rarely has so much been promised and so little delivered as at Old Street roundabout in east London, finally complete after more than a decade in the works. It was supposed to be the radiant hub of the UK’s very own Te
  • Country diary: A forgotten church that’s being returned to the earth | Alexandra Pearce-Broomhead

    Merther, Cornwall: For centuries, a small local population worshipped at St Cohan’s. Now it’s the ivy and thistles, ferns and avens that take their nourishment hereIn the hamlet of Merther, nature is concealing a secret. Wrapped in robes of ivy and traveller’s joy, the ruins of a 14th-century church are hidden among a small copse. Little remains of the original building; the crumbling outer walls have been slowly succumbing to wildlife ever since the church closed 80-odd y
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  • Grenfell inquiry has shone a light on architecture profession’s flaws | Letters

    Grenfell inquiry has shone a light on architecture profession’s flaws | Letters
    Kerr Robertson and Catherine Brownell on the structural defects in the training and fees of architectsOliver Wainwright’s article about the Grenfell Tower inquiry report was spot-on (‘Professional buck-passers’: why the excoriating Grenfell report was right to damn architects, 5 September). He could also have added that the Royal Institute of British Architects’ complacency on continuing professional development (CPD) has been another factor. On the point about architects
  • A genius in pink jandals: Rewi Thompson, the Māori architect who shocked his neighbours

    A genius in pink jandals: Rewi Thompson, the Māori architect who shocked his neighbours
    He was one of the boldest and most influential Māori architects, whose outfits were as eye-catching as his buildings. A new book captures his creations, from his own defiant home to a ‘healing’ correctional facilityIn the leafy Auckland suburb of Kohimarama, where pitch-roofed clapboard homes line well-kept streets, a striking grey ziggurat rises from the subtropical foliage. It looks like a defensive fortification, greeting the road with a monolithic, windowless facade. Narrow
  • Grenfell brought back memories of Summerland fire | Letter

    Grenfell brought back memories of Summerland fire | Letter
    Deborah Gahan remembers a fire on the Isle of Man in 1973 and says the Grenfell Tower inquiry shows how little has changedDo you remember Summerland? I did, on 14 June 2017, when I saw the images of Grenfell Tower burning on the news. Summerland was a holiday complex on the Isle of Man that burned down on 2 August 1973, killing 50 people and seriously injuring a further 80.It was designed as an all‑weather tourist attraction with a capacity of 10,000, but its walls were clad
  • Stairways to modernist heaven – in pictures

    Architecture obsessive Adam Štěch has photographed the interiors of over 5,000 modern gems around the globe, from hunting lodges to high-rises. Ahead of a new exhibition, he shares his favourite flights of fancy Continue reading...
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  • Flood the golf courses, demolish the freeways: what could Melbourne look like in 2070?

    The NGV’s first landscape architecture exhibition has invited eight visionaries to picture the future of different sites along Birrarung – the Yarra RiverGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailIn half a century, should Melbourne’s golf courses be flooded and transformed into wetlands? Could the city’s freeways be replaced with public parks? Will underwater robotic drones have a part to play in ridding our waterways of invasive species?These are some of the questions e
  • Simon Verity obituary

    Simon Verity obituary
    Master sculptor and stone carver who created grottoes, public memorials and ecclesiastial work in the UK and the USA 1983 poster for the Victoria and Albert Museum shows a letter cutter with corduroy trousers, braces and a shapeless hat standing at the base of an inscription cut into the terracotta wall announcing in flaming gilded capitals its opening as the Henry Cole Wing, now sadly obscured by the new entrance paving. The artist appearing in the photograph was Simon Verity, who has died aged
  • ‘Professional buck-passers’: why the excoriating Grenfell report was right to damn architects

    The ultimate responsibility for the tower’s safety lay with its architect, said the 1,700-page report, which highlighted a ‘widespread failure among the profession’. Why are so many architects now utterly detached from the realities of construction?Lying manufacturers, incompetent inspectors, muddled regulations, contemptuous landlords – the blame for the Grenfell Tower fire has been hurled in all directions, exposing a housing and construction industry that is rotten at
  • California home thought to have inspired Sydney Opera House sells for US$20m less than asking price

    California home thought to have inspired Sydney Opera House sells for US$20m less than asking price
    The six-bedroom Wave House in Malibu was designed by Harry Gesner, whose son says it inspired Jørn Utzon’s Sydney landmarkGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailAn iconic California beach house thought to have inspired Jørn Utzon’s design for the Sydney Opera House has sold for US$20m less than its original asking price.Malibu’s Wave House, designed by the American architect Harry Gesner in the late 1950s, was bought by the former Victoria’s Secret model
  • ‘There’s a lot to be built still’: the architect Mariam Issoufou on excavating the past to build Africa’s future

    ‘There’s a lot to be built still’: the architect Mariam Issoufou on excavating the past to build Africa’s future
    One of the continent’s most-sought after designers draws inspiration from the traditional mud-brick building to create modern, sustainable structuresGrowing up near the historic mud-brick city of Agadez, Niger’s gateway to the Sahara, Mariam Issoufou was always inspired by the majestic adobe structures around her. The 27-metre-high minaret of the city’s mosque, the tallest mud-brick structure in the world, has stood on the sandy horizon since the 16th century. But Issoufou neve
  • Going up: Can Britain’s empty department stores be brought back to life?

    Going up: Can Britain’s empty department stores be brought back to life?
    With many branches of famous chains lying empty, work is under way to transform them into housing, hotels, offices, independent shops and more. Could this be the key to revitalising the high street?Department stores, once palaces of delight and theatres of modernity, enclosed commercial town squares where you might meet, fall in love, get married and furnish your new home, are now none of these things. Empty, cold and bulky, they occupy town centres like fridge freezers that no one will take awa
  • Antony Gormley joins fight against ‘destruction’ of historic King’s Cross site

    Angel of the North artist is among residents objecting to development plans for Coal Drops Yard in LondonSir Antony Gormley, the artist who created the Angel of the North, is among King’s Cross residents ­objecting to proposals that could see Coal Drops Yard, a grade II-listed industrial site, divided into streets of shops and “grab-and-go” food retailers.Gormley and his artist ­partner, Vicken Parsons, who live in the nearby Gasholders building, said in a submission to
  • Milwaukee plans to build tallest timber building in the world

    Milwaukee plans to build tallest timber building in the world
    Wisconsin city – already home to world’s tallest wooden building – announces proposal for tower with 55 floorsThe city of Milwaukee in Wisconsin is currently home to the tallest timber building in the world, but this summer the city announced a new proposal to build an even taller one.Designed by the Vancouver-based architecture firm, Michael Green Architecture, the tower, once completed, would become the tallest mass timber structure in the world with 55 floors – ab
  • Monstrous carbuncles to talking columns: the National Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing is still a controversy magnet

    Monstrous carbuncles to talking columns: the National Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing is still a controversy magnet
    Prince Charles detested the plans for its extension. Now its major donor has criticised it from beyond the grave. So what’s coming next? Something that looks a lot like an airport lounge …If buildings could speak, would they always object to their demolition? In the case of the National Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing, now undergoing a controversial redevelopment, a voice from the grave heartily approves of the arrival of the wrecking ball.It has emerged that, during the demolition o
  • Builders renovating National Gallery find funder’s letter commending demolition

    Builders renovating National Gallery find funder’s letter commending demolition
    John Sainsbury hid note in 1990 inside false column he objected to, anticipating foyer would one day be remodelled to his likingWhy the building is still a controversy magnetBuilders knocking down a column at the National Gallery were surprised to find a long-lost note amid the rubble thanking them for demolishing the “unnecessary” pillar.While removing a column in the gallery’s Sainsbury Wing, demolition workers discovered a letter dating back to 1990 from its funder, John Sai
  • Gimme shelter… how social housing in stormy Shetland was transformed by a modernist fleeing 60s London

    Gimme shelter… how social housing in stormy Shetland was transformed by a modernist fleeing 60s London
    The architect Richard Gibson, a contemporary of Richard Rogers, left forward-thinking Camden council in 1969 for the UK’s northernmost isles. There, he says, he refined his ideas about well-made homes for all, in work that feels newly relevantRichard Gibson and I turn up unannounced at a primary school in Hamnavoe, Shetland – a light, airy, steel-framed structure of repeating shallow-pitched roofs designed by him more than 40 years ago. We are enthusiastically welcomed by the headtea
  • ‘Out of this world’: free app will offer tour of modernist Manchester

    ‘Out of this world’: free app will offer tour of modernist Manchester
    Developers hope guide to 20th-century buildings will soon be available in other cities“As a prewar building it must have blown people’s minds,” says Jack Hale, admiring the glassy magnificence of the Express building in Manchester. “In the same period you were still getting stone, classical buildings and then this appears.”His colleague Eddy Rhead agrees. “It must have been like a space-ship landing. To the average Mancunian it would have been out of this worl
  • Splashing in the Seine, diving in the Danube: the drive to make cities swimmable

    Splashing in the Seine, diving in the Danube: the drive to make cities swimmable
    Campaigners and architects around the world are turning previously polluted rivers and harbours into the perfect places for a refreshing dip. So will we soon be swimming to work?On a summer morning in the Swiss city of Basel, groups of commuters bob merrily down the Rhine. They’re not on boats but in their trunks, clutching fish-shaped waterproof bags that double as floats as they drift to work alongside cargo ships and gravel barges.At lunchtime in Copenhagen, the harbour walls are packed
  • Vaults of ambition: shock find under London Museum enchants its builders

    Vaults of ambition: shock find under London Museum enchants its builders
    Discovery of Victorian network hiding under some of city’s busiest streets set ‘magical’ new challenge for multimillion pound projectWhen a contractor working on the site of the new London Museum at Smithfield market knocked a tentative hole in a bricked-up basement wall, all he could see, peering in with a torch, was a muddy pile of rubble and some scurrying rats.That unpromising beginning, however, would lead to an “unparalleled” discovery. Behind the wall, once t
  • Absolutely prefabulous: a vision of the future

    Absolutely prefabulous: a vision of the future
    An Italian architect teamed up with her father on the prototype of a very special project on the family hill in Lombardy, then they built 50 of themWhen the 43-year-old Italian architect Valentina Moretti returned to Italy from living in Switzerland and the US to help her father, Vittorio, in his construction company, she seized the chance to work on the prototype of her vision for the future of prefabricated homes.“After many years working with famous architects, I understood that I reall
  • Zigzag patterns on walls could help cool overheated buildings, study finds

    Zigzag patterns on walls could help cool overheated buildings, study finds
    An architectural zigzag design can limit how much heat is absorbed by buildings – and emitted back to spaceIncorporating zigzag patterns into building walls could help cool overheated buildings, research has found.Buildings are now responsible for approximately 40% of global energy consumption, contributing more than a third of global carbon dioxide emissions. Continue reading...
  • Cities are tackling rising heat – but they have to avoid a dangerous trap

    Cities are tackling rising heat – but they have to avoid a dangerous trap
    With modern solutions such as air-con aggravating the problem, ancient heat-management techniques can offer answersClimate scientists baffled by unexpected pace of heatingBeneath the streets of Seville – the city nicknamed “El Sartén”, the frying pan of Europe, where summer temperatures regularly top 40C – a €5m (about £4m ) cooling strategy is taking the city back in time.The millennium-old Persian technique of “qanat” features underground c
  • ‘What they threw away, I used’: the story behind Nek Chand’s 25-acre outsider art masterpiece

    ‘What they threw away, I used’: the story behind Nek Chand’s 25-acre outsider art masterpiece
    This forest of intricately decorated statues was begun in secret by a man who never considered himself an artist but built what became India’s most visited tourist site after the Taj Mahal, the Rock Garden of ChandigarhA forest of curious cement statues stands on the edge of the city of Chandigarh in northern India, their bodies dressed in colourful costumes made from beads and broken glass bangles. There are figures of women carrying baskets on their heads, alongside dancers and athletes,
  • ‘Casual decommunisation’: seeking to save Ukraine’s Soviet-era modernist masterpieces

    ‘Casual decommunisation’: seeking to save Ukraine’s Soviet-era modernist masterpieces
    Dmytro Soloviov is campaigning to protect Ukraine’s USSR architectural past from the double threat of Russian bombs and ‘blind fury’ at MoscowAs Russian bombs rain down on Ukraine, one young Ukrainian activist is trying to halt destruction of a different kind: the neglect of, and damage to, modernist buildings and public art.Nearly a decade ago, in 2015, Ukraine instituted laws demanding the removal of monuments and street names glorifying the country’s communist past, wi
  • Postwar new towns like Milton Keynes offer Labour a masterclass in planning | Letters

    Postwar new towns like Milton Keynes offer Labour a masterclass in planning | Letters
    Dr Alistair Fair and Ellie Brown respond to comments by the RIBA president, Muyiwa Oki, on Labour’s housebuilding plans. Plus Laura Steel on growing up in Washington, Tyne and WearMuyiwa Oki, the president of the Royal Institute of British Architects, is right to say that the new generation of new towns planned by the government should learn from the planning mistakes of the past (Labour’s ‘grey belt’ plans could result in isolated communities, warns leading architect, 2
  • I wanted a tiny house – and a big life. Could I have it all in 25 square metres?

    I wanted a tiny house – and a big life. Could I have it all in 25 square metres?
    At 50, home ownership was out of reach for Louise Southerden. When she decided to build a tiny house on tyres, it promised liberation from Australia’s rental hamster wheelGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailWhat does it mean to come home? To have a place of your own that feels safe in all the important ways? That wraps its arms around you when you arrive at the doorstep drenched in the problems of the world?For decades, whenever I thought of home, I didn’t picture the houses I
  • A renovated Queenslander with a home office in a former laundry wins Houses awards top prize

    A revamped Brisbane worker’s cottage measuring less than 200 sq metres has been capped the best new home in the countryGet our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcastA renovation of a 1910 Brisbane worker’s cottage, which focuses on compact space, has won the Australian house of the year in the 2024 Houses awards.Red Hill House and Studio is the home and office of architect Nicholas Skepper, designer Zuzana Kovar and their two young children. The renovation

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