The architects have designed a series of interventions in Bermondsey’s Blue Market, aimed at revitalising it and better connecting it with the surrounding area
Author Archives: Rob Wilson
Pablo Bronstein’s hellish exhibition at the Soane – an OTT capriccio
Hell in its Heyday reprises Bronstein’s fascination with architecture – here pumped up in a riot of ultra-conspicuous consumption and material excess which leaves little space for the viewer’s imagination, says Rob Wilson
WilkinsonEyre completes two new stands at Lord’s cricket ground
The 24m-high Compton and Edrich stands echo the curved shape of the Future Systems-designed, Stirling Prize-winning media centre which they flank
UK Pavilion by Es Devlin opens at delayed Expo 2020 Dubai
A 20m-high CLT structure, the first UK pavilion for a World Expo to be designed by a woman, finally opens today (1 October) at Expo 2020 in Dubai
Sheppard Robson completes schools campus in East Ayrshire
Sheppard Robson has handed over a campus of school buildings organised as four pitched-roof pavilions linked by an elevated route which cuts through shared internal courtyards and atria
Pride pavilion designed by young Fosters team constructed in Soho
The ‘Rainbow After The Storm’ pavilion was the winning installation in the London Festival of Architecture and Architecture LGBT+’s Pride Pop-Up competition and is open until this Sunday, 26 September
AJ100 Building of the Year 2021 announced
HawkinsBrown’s Plumstead Centre in south-east London has been named AJ100 Building of the Year
Design Engine completes £24m student halls for Arts University Bournemouth
A new scheme by Design Engine, opening for the new academic year, will accommodate 300 students at Arts University Bournemouth’s Wallisdown campus in Poole
AJ100 Collaboration of the Year 2021 named
BDP has won the AJ100 Collaboration of the Year award for its work as lead consultant across six NHS Nightingale Hospitals
Delayed David Adjaye-curated Royal Academy Summer show opens
The show is cool, calm and well-corralled if missing a bit of magic, writes Rob Wilson