The timber-lined Lea Bridge Library Pavilion in east London adds a café and flexible community space, leading to a fourfold increase in the library’s use
Author Archives: Emily Booth
Thank goodness there’s a growing commitment to work positively with buildings that are already around us
The retrofit projects featured in our latest issue show how – with expertise from today’s architects – great buildings can be timeless
Our guest editors POoR Collective throw down a challenge to the profession
We were thrilled when POoR Collective accepted our invitation to guest-edit October’s special issue of the AJ, says Emily Booth
Our Student Prize issue sends a powerful message: the future’s right here
For all those longing to do architecture differently – you could make a strong start by listening to the changemakers in this month’s AJ, says Emily Booth
Our Neighbourhood issue is bursting with schemes to help communities flourish
A school and a community facility are just two projects in our Neighbourhood issue, which is bursting with intriguing schemes, says Emily Booth
The Glasgow Issue: Architects are stitching Glasgow back together
Architects are adding a greater coherence to the city of Glasgow with a swathe of regeneration projects, writes Emily Booth, ahead of the AJ’s Glasgow-focussed content
AJ100 Practice of the Year winner revealed
Buckley Gray Yeoman was praised by the judges for its ‘beautiful design work’ and huge growth over the year
Architype wins AJ100 Collaboration of the Year for Cambridge scheme
Architype has won the AJ100 Collaboration of the Year award for its work with Peter Kelly at ISG and Eve Waldron on the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership’s Entopia Building, Cambridge
The AJ100 survey shows a profession bouncing back from the pandemic
The latest data suggests that 2022, for all its challenges, was a bounce-back year
AJ Small Projects is a joyous celebration of big ideas realised on a small budget
AJ Small Projects is surely one of the most joyful events in the architectural calendar, celebrating the vital and dynamic possibilities of working at a small scale and within modest budgets, says Emily Booth