Community Spaces in Rohingya Refugee
Six sustainably built structures in the world’s largest refugee camps, Bangladesh, housing Rohingya fleeing Myanmar’s genocidal violence, are a collection of practice exercise
Six sustainably built structures in the world’s largest refugee camps, Bangladesh, housing Rohingya fleeing Myanmar’s genocidal violence, are a collection of practice exercise
Aldeburgh House in Suffolk England design by David Walker Architects – home emerges from ten-year self-confessed ‘labour of love’ with unpromising 1960s bungalow on the edge of golf course
Architecture visualisation is not only a medium to show the unbuilt spaces but also a kind of virtual souvenir: Museu Brasileiro da Escultura e Ecologia by Paulo Mendes da Rocha in Brasil
Community-driven Bangladesh project provides public spaces in the riverine city with 250,000 residents; over time, access to and use of the river and banks had become impeded
Rotterdam Architecture Month 2022 settles on roof of Het Nieuwe Instituut – another high-level crowd-puller designed by Dutch architectural firm MVRDV: city gains temporary vantage point this summer
AO Arena Manchester indoor venue building renewal by HOK, English entertainment centre adds standing-floor capacity, new hospitality lounges and upgrades concourse experience
City of the Future Design Competition Belfast for architects, planners and urban design consultants to transform city’s largest publicly owned site, 25 acre vacant site: £10,000 prize
Friars St Ives, 16th-century house restoration by Mole Architects, England: rescue of derelict grade II listed building reveals rich & varied history of characterful and intriguing property
Civil Engineering Building University of Cambridge design by Grimshaw: research and collaboration spaces wrap around core labs, culminating in a shared canteen and roof garden on the top floor
Brentwood Preparatory School building in Essex design by Cottrell & Vermeulen Architecture: a new sheltering spine threads together and brings sense to the disparate collection of buildings
Wintringham Primary Academy, St Neots, by dRMM Architects: architectural form may seem wilful in the flat landscape, but the school building design‘s clear front relates to the new town square