The first results of an anonymous salary survey, revealing which UK architecture practices pay what, have been made public
Author Archives: Richard Waite
Chipperfield and Assemble reveal designs to expand Canberra ‘maker’ community
UK practices David Chipperfield Architects and Assemble have put forward plans to expand a neighbourhood of makers and creatives on the edge of the Australian capital
Goldstein Heather to double size of west London terraced home
Goldstein Heather has won approval to double the size of a Victorian terrace in west London
Chippenham church with 1960s Frank Roper artworks listed
The 1968 Church of St Peter in Chippenham, designed by architect Kenneth Nealon and featuring windows and artworks by famous sculptor Frank Roper, has been listed at Grade II
Michael Gove back as levelling up minister after 111 days
Michael Gove has returned as the levelling up, housing and communities secretary – a role he was sacked from just 111 days ago by former prime minister Boris Johnson
ZHA beats Foster to win huge sports project in China
Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) has won the design competition for a massive new sports complex, featuring a 60,000-seat football stadium, in eastern China
FaulknerBrowns’ Three Ships mural scheme in Hull approved
FaulknerBrowns has won approval for a new mixed-use development in Hull which will incorporate the once-threatened Three Ships mural
ARB raises retention fee again as architects’ business confidence crashes
The Architects Registration Board (ARB) is to raise its annual retention fee by £30 for the second time in two years while the RIBA revealed architects’ confidence about workload has plummeted
Big names lined up for £22m Kingston University job
Kingston University has named a Who’s Who of leading architects, including three previous Stirling Prize winners, on its shortlist to design a new £22 million ‘highly sustainable, student-facing building’
Selldorf reworks plans for National Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing after backlash
Selldorf Architects has reworked its plans to remodel the Grade I-listed National Gallery and Sainsbury Wing after leading architectural figures hit out at the designs