A team led by Haworth Tompkins has been selected to revamp the 1930s De La Warr Pavilion – the Grade I-listed Modernist icon in Bexhill-on-Sea, East Sussex
New practice StudioFolk: ‘Teaming up helps beat the lack-of-experience catch-22’
The latest in a series of practice profiles looking at architects who have recently decided to go it alone
Hopkins’ turnover up by a third as overseas work booms
Hopkins has reported a 30 per cent hike in turnover on the back of increasing international workloads – but income from UK jobs continues to drop
Tony Fretton Architects shuts its doors
Award-winning practice Tony Fretton Architects has closed after 42 years in business
RetroFirst Stories: OEB and Arrant Land on turning a church hall into homes
The latest in an AJ series looking at architects who have saved buildings from demolition or given them a new lease of life
Haworth Tompkins wins approval for Reading Hexagon theatre revamp
Reading Borough Council has given the green light to £9.5 million plans by Haworth Tompkins to overhaul its Brutalist 1977 Hexagon theatre
Morris+Company’s Haringey communal warehouse living approved
Morris and Company has won approval for a purpose-built, 101 bedroom warehouse-living scheme in Seven Sisters Road, north London
Threefold’s tiny wedge-shaped King’s Cross house rubberstamped
Threefold Architects has been handed final approval for a 53m² home on a wedge-shaped plot near King’s Cross station in central London
AI survey: architects torn between risks and opportunities as use surges
With almost two-thirds of architects using AI, the profession is at an ethical and practical crossroads. Here are the results of the AJ’s first comprehensive survey into the industry’s use of AI technologies
RetroFirst Stories: AHMM on saving a 1970s Mayfair office from demolition
The latest in an AJ series looking at architects who have saved buildings from the bulldozers or given them a new lease of life