All articles by Martin Spring – Page 18

  • Features

    School of hard knocks

    2001-11-23T00:00:00Z

    Designing and building a European university in 10 months was quite a feat. The fact that a hastily assembled team managed it while under sporadic shellfire was even more impressive …

  • Features

    The big freeze

    2001-11-23T00:00:00Z

    Winter is coming for the UK construction industry, and Building's latest national survey reveals that only regions with a large amount of public sector work can hope to avoid the worst of the blizzards.

  • Features

    War poetry

    2001-11-09T00:00:00Z

    Crashing metallic forms representing a battle-torn globe make up Daniel Libeskind's first British offering. And yet, says Martin Spring, the Imperial War Museum North is also an ode to curvature and tricks of the light.

  • Features

    How striking

    2001-11-02T00:00:00Z

    This Bryant & May match factory, now converted into sleek 21st-century offices by Urban Splash and Shed KM, is a sign of Liverpool's growing self-confidence and commercial clout. A round-up of the city's regeneration starts with the story of its conversion.

  • Features

    Jellied eel

    2001-11-02T00:00:00Z

    A London ad agency wanted a reception that would tell its clients that it was creative, show off the product and give them somewhere to sit – all on a tiny budget. This is what it got …

  • Features

    Come together

    2001-11-02T00:00:00Z

    Liverpool has only limited improvement to show for all the money that has been thrown at it over the past 20 years. But now big commercial developments and innovative housing partnerships are changing the view from the Mersey.

  • Features

    Baroness Blackstone

    2001-11-02T00:00:00Z

    Not only does the minister for the arts bubble with enthusiasm for architecture and architects, she's determined that Whitehall should take them seriously, too. And she's even ready to name and shame colleagues who aren't architecturally on message.

  • Features

    Fast-acting relief

    2001-10-19T00:00:00Z

    GlaxoSmithKline's £315m global headquarters in west London has echoes of BA Waterside – but it was built in half the time.

  • Features

    Tate modernised

    2001-10-12T00:00:00Z

    Tate Britain's £32m redevelopment is a textbook example of current thinking on gallery and historic building refurbishment

  • News

    Banks seek emergency offices

    2001-10-12T00:00:00Z

    British banks intend to fit out and equip premises outside London where they can move staff if there is a terrorist attack or other emergency.

  • Features

    All Saïd and done

    2001-10-05T00:00:00Z

    Born in scandal, Oxford University's Saïd Business School has succeeded in merging ancient Roman discipline with contemporary urban humanism – with a ziggurat thrown in for good measure. Building visits architect Dixon Jones' monumental building.

  • Features

    Dinghy dell

    2001-09-21T00:00:00Z

    Nestled in a leafy corner of Battersea Park, a new boathouse takes its inspiration from the Victorian era – updated for the 21st century

  • Features

    Court order

    2001-09-21T00:00:00Z

    PFI prisons are considered a success story, and perhaps courthouses too, but police stations often fail to do justice to their purpose. Martin Building examines the government's spending plans for law and order

  • News

    Levitt Bernstein wins £1.25m from Stoke council

    2001-09-21T00:00:00Z

    London architect reclaims overdue fees, as council pays out £20m for lottery arts projects costed at £4.7m.

  • Features

    Ring master

    2001-09-14T00:00:00Z

    Barton Willmore's riverside HQ Thames Water is an oasis of civic design in the architecture desert of Reading's city centre.

  • Features

    Inspired images

    2001-09-07T00:00:00Z

    Another glossy architectural tome with the usual gleaming pictures, but as the essays from Lord Rogers and Tony Blair make clear, this is more than just coffee table fodder.

  • Features

    Putting our houses in order

    2001-09-07T00:00:00Z

    Recent government commitments to social housebuilding look impressive. But how much can really be delivered over the next three years?

  • Features

    The delivery boy

    2001-09-07T00:00:00Z

    Lord Falconer, the new minister of state for housing and planning, talks to Building about how he intends to turn the government's housing pledges into reality

  • Features

    Chemical reaction

    2001-08-31T00:00:00Z

    Having revealed the appalling state of his chemistry department to a TV crew, Cambridge professor David King secured part of a government refurbishment grant to give it a new lease of life.

  • Features

    Ralph's rainbow

    2001-08-17T00:00:00Z

    Black, gold, crimson, orange, blue, green: the first view of Erskine's Greenwich Millennium Village is of a riot in a paint factory.