Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF) has unveiled reworked plans for an already approved tower project in the City of London, three years after getting the go-ahead for a 33-storey scheme on the plot
Stanton Williams designs first boarding houses for girls at historic school
Work will start next week on Stanton Williams’ plans for the first boarding houses for girls at a 642-year-old independent school in Hampshire
‘Strong focus on aesthetics’ contributed to Norwegian bridge collapse
A ‘strong focus on aesthetics’ contributed to the weakness of a bridge in Norway that dramatically collapsed in 2022, an official report has concluded
Labour looks to building on ‘grey belt’ to meet housing targets
Labour has promised to release ‘grey belt’ land – low-quality or neglected green belt land – for housebuilding if it wins the forthcoming general election
Alt Studios wins consent for homes and workspace on former NI barracks
Emerging practice Alt Studios has received planning consent for 40 apartments and commercial spaces on a former military site in Northern Ireland
UK’s biggest architecture practices fail to close gender pay gap
The gender pay gap reported by the UK’s top 10 architecture practices has widened since figures were last published a year ago
Don’t ban architects without CSCS ‘skills’ card from site, contractors told
Contractors have been erroneously denying site access to architects without CSCS cards (Certification Scheme for Construction Skills), the Construction Industry Council says
Bennetts Associates beats big names to land Greek college campus job
Bennetts Associates has won a star-studded contest to redesign the estate of a prestigious Greek education hub
Cousins & Cousins gets green light for Hertfordshire pool house
Cousins & Cousins has secured consent for a pool house and wellness area within the sprawling grounds of a Grade II-listed manor house in Hertfordshire
Architects should learn humility to tackle climate crisis, RIBA essay says
Architects need to show more humility when dealing with the climate emergency, a leading academic has said in the first of a new series of RIBA essays