Turner Prize-nominated duo Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe use installation, performance, mapping and video to explore the systems that organise the world through food. They talk to Rupert Bickersteth
Author Archives: Rupert Bickersteth
Five highlights from WAF 2021
The World Architecture Festival returns in digital form for the second year. Book your passes today to gain access to hundreds of talks, events and panels with industry leaders
Shubha Taparia‘s Crescent – art in the scaffolding
Crescent, the latest work by artist Shubha Taparia, reimagines and recontextualises the notion of urban transformation
Mass Collective presents multifarious capital in new show ‘Londons’
In the first physical show from new photographers’ group Mass Collective, the many faces of London during lockdown are explored
Spanning the gap: ‘Whether bridges or buildings – ultimately it is all design’
Esperance Bridge by Moxon Architects and Arup, which opened in July, takes its form and colour from the lost railway bridges of the Regent’s Canal. Rupert Bickersteth speaks to Moxon’s Ben Addy and Ezra Groskin about the project
Donald Insall Associates revamps Colwyn Bay’s Victoria Pier
Just in time for a boom summer of domestic tourism, Donald Insall Associates has revamped Colwyn Bay’s Victoria Pier
‘Full of promise’: Anglia Ruskin University Student Show 2021
This year's student shows demonstrate the Chelmsford-based school's new ambition to work for a place in the firmament of architectural education
Walthamstow underpass celebrates the outdoor life
The competition-winning Wood Street Altarpiece, created by artist and designer Eleanor Hill, is the first in a series of installations for the east London borough of Waltham Forest
Daylight Robbery – Andy Billman documents the window tax
Photographer Andy Billman explores the visual legacy of the window tax on London’s built environment
Sandcastles from the air: England’s unseen seaside heritage
A new book of early 20th-century aerial photography depicts England’s rich seaside heritage as few holidaymakers ever see it