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London: The Latest Architecture and News

Ampersand Building / Darling Associates

Ampersand Building / Darling Associates - Renovation, Facade, Handrail, Stairs, Arcade, Arch, BeamAmpersand Building / Darling Associates - Renovation, Kitchen, Facade, Handrail, Table, ChairAmpersand Building / Darling Associates - RenovationAmpersand Building / Darling Associates - Renovation, Door, Facade, Column, BeamAmpersand Building / Darling Associates - More Images+ 14

Solstice Point / Nick Baker Architects

Solstice Point / Nick Baker Architects - Office Buildings, Facade, Balcony, HandrailSolstice Point / Nick Baker Architects - Office Buildings, Facade, Handrail, Table, ChairSolstice Point / Nick Baker Architects - Office Buildings, Courtyard, FacadeSolstice Point / Nick Baker Architects - Office Buildings, Facade, Handrail, Stairs, BalconySolstice Point / Nick Baker Architects - More Images+ 17

Kamvari Architects Design Mixed-Use Development for Tehran

The winner of a competition for a mixed-use building scheme, London-based Kamvari Architects has unveiled the design for Zartosht, a 300,000 square-foot retail and office building in Tehran, Iran. The building's design is based largely on local cultural contexts, like the region’s reputation for renowned fabric and textile shops, and environmentalism, particularly with respect to solar energy.

These Detachable Pods Aim to Provide Shelter for Britain’s Homeless

The 6th annual “Space for New Visions” competition has announced its winner: a project entitled “Homes for the Homeless,” by James Furzer of Spatial Design Architects. Hosted by FAKRO, a global manufacturer of roof windows and loft ladders, and A10 Magazine for European Architecture, the competition sought proposals that incorporated FAKRO products. With entries from around the world, projects were judged based on user comfort, environmental impact, functionality and natural light, among other things. Read about the winning entry after the break.

Alain de Botton: "London is Becoming a Bad Version of Dubai"

"London is on the verge of being ruined for all future generations," says Alain de Botton – a Swiss philosopher, notable author and founder of The School of Life and Living Architecture. "With a whopping 260 towers in the pipeline no area is safe, as planners, property developers and the mayor's office commit crimes against beauty to create fun buildings." In a film for The Guardian De Botton explains why he believes we're right to be nervous – and how we can stop this "clear desecration" of the UK's capital city.

Video: How London’s Sightlines Are Affecting its Architectural Design

The city of London has been growing rapidly in the past decade, and with the help of New London Architecture's large-scale urban model of the city, some strange and interesting trends can be seen. Since the advent of ever-taller buildings, London has put laws into place to prevent views to historically significant buildings like St. Paul’s Cathedral and the Parliament Building from being blocked. As a result, strangely-shaped designs like the Leadenhall Building, endearingly referred to as the “cheese grater” by Londoners, have emerged as a way to work around the sightlines enforced by the city. Watch the video above for more on this interesting design dilemma.

Woodview Mews / Geraghty Taylor Architects

Woodview Mews  / Geraghty Taylor Architects - Housing, Facade, ArchWoodview Mews  / Geraghty Taylor Architects - Housing, Facade, DoorWoodview Mews  / Geraghty Taylor Architects - Housing, FacadeWoodview Mews  / Geraghty Taylor Architects - Housing, FacadeWoodview Mews  / Geraghty Taylor Architects - More Images+ 15

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1337
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Parklex Prodema

London's Royal Academy Launches 'Urban Jigsaw' Ideas Competition

The Royal Academy of Arts in London have launched a new international ideas competition which aims "to refocus attention to the huge potential of the brownfield sites that still exist across London." 'Brownfield' sites, or those earmarked for potential building development that have had previous development on them, are plentiful in the UK capital. This competition seeks "speculative ideas [which] make the most of these missing pieces in London’s urban jigsaw."

Two Tabernacle Street / Piercy&Company

Two Tabernacle Street / Piercy&Company - Exterior Photography, Office Buildings, Facade, Stairs, HandrailTwo Tabernacle Street / Piercy&Company - Office BuildingsTwo Tabernacle Street / Piercy&Company - Interior Photography, Office Buildings, Stairs, Column, HandrailTwo Tabernacle Street / Piercy&Company - Interior Photography, Office Buildings, FacadeTwo Tabernacle Street / Piercy&Company - More Images+ 8

Create a Mini Metropolis with Sticky Page Markers

Building a city has never been so easy. With Duncan Shotton Design Studio's Sticky Page Markers you can create your own urban landscape, while marking the pages of your books, catalogues, or notes.

Zaha Hadid Named "New Londoner of the Year"

New London Architecture (NLA) has named the winners of this years New London Awards, celebrating the best projects and architects shaping London today. Taking home top honors, Zaha Hadid was crowned "New Londoner of the Year" for her influential work, both in the UK and abroad. The jury commended Hadid for "her role as a champion of design to both the government and the general public alike," citing her success with the London Aquatic Center and the Serpentine Sackler Gallery.

Out of the 51 projects awarded, Pringle Richards Sharratt's Black Cultural Archives (BCA) in Brixton was named London's best new building. The Grade II listed structure, which had been on the English Heritage's Heritage at Risk Register since 1992, was restored as a new home for BCA’s extensive archives, serving as an exemplar for preservation and reuse.

'The Future Will Just Have to Wait': London's 10,000 Year Masterplan

Alice Theodorou, a graduating masters student from London's Royal College of Art, has developed a project which attempts to combat the challenges that London is set to face over the next 10,000 years. Her scheme factors in projections for population growth and then decline, rising sea levels, stricter energy targets, material depletion, future space exploration and, most interestingly, language obsolescence.

'The Future Will Just Have to Wait': London's 10,000 Year Masterplan - Image 1 of 4'The Future Will Just Have to Wait': London's 10,000 Year Masterplan - Image 2 of 4'The Future Will Just Have to Wait': London's 10,000 Year Masterplan - Image 3 of 4'The Future Will Just Have to Wait': London's 10,000 Year Masterplan - Image 4 of 4'The Future Will Just Have to Wait': London's 10,000 Year Masterplan - More Images+ 11

Second Home London Office / Selgascano

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  • Architects: Selgascano
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2014

UNStudio's Ben van Berkel on Designing High-Rise for Central London

In the latest episode of Monocle's Section D, Josh Fehnert talks to Ben van Berkel, co-founder and principal of Amsterdam-based UNStudio, about London's new Caneletto residential tower. The office, which was founded in 1988, has completed projects around the world ranging from Rotterdam’s Erasmus Bridge to the Mercedes-Benz Museumin Stuttgart. With over 81 built projects, and 54 currently in progress (including Raffles City in Hangzhou and Scotts Tower in Singapore), London’s Canaletto Tower (which is due to be completed in 2015) marks the practice’s first major project in the UK. The tower, located at the confluence of two London districts — Islington and Shoreditch — marks a significant moment for the Dutch practice's œuvre.

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HUB 67 / LYN Atelier

HUB 67 / LYN Atelier - Community Center, Door, Facade, BeamHUB 67 / LYN Atelier - Community Center, FacadeHUB 67 / LYN Atelier - Community CenterHUB 67 / LYN Atelier - Community Center, Facade, DoorHUB 67 / LYN Atelier - More Images+ 10

AD Classics: V&A Spiral / Daniel Libeskind + Cecil Balmond

The violent insertion of Daniel Libeskind’s Spiral into the Victorian neighborhood of South Kensington renders a cataclysmic disruption into a landscape of order and propriety. It envisions a rupture in the fabric of space and time, aggressively anachronistic from the building it adjoins, unapologetically appealing not to cultured humanism but to the mathematical logic of complexity and chaos. What is now textbook "Libeskind" was in 1996 a shocking non-starter for the London establishment, an unacceptable risk for a city perpetually torn between its agitated cosmopolitan energies and its quintessential impulse toward nostalgia and restraint. Nearly twenty years after the Spiral was selected as the winner of a distinguished international competition, this controversial extension proposal for the Victoria and Albert Museum remains unbuilt.

AD Classics: V&A Spiral / Daniel Libeskind + Cecil Balmond - Museum, FacadeAD Classics: V&A Spiral / Daniel Libeskind + Cecil Balmond - Museum, FacadeAD Classics: V&A Spiral / Daniel Libeskind + Cecil Balmond - Museum, Facade, BeamAD Classics: V&A Spiral / Daniel Libeskind + Cecil Balmond - MuseumAD Classics: V&A Spiral / Daniel Libeskind + Cecil Balmond - More Images+ 13

Populous Creates Eames-Inspired Installation for World Architecture Festival London

Taking inspiration from Charles and Ray EamesHouse of Cards, London-based practice Populous have developed an installation for the inaugural World Architecture Festival (WAF) exhibition. Built from "hundreds of super-sized multiples of a single ‘W' form, the dramatic seven metre high installation forms the centrepiece" of an exhibition which seeks to showcase "the very best in world architecture." This year, 350 projects have been shortlisted from some the world’s best architects and designers.

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SelgasCano's Serpentine Pavilion: "Cheap Plastic Bag" or "Pop-Art Inflatable Funscape"?

We're just three days into the four-month display of SelgasCano's 2015 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion and the comments it has generated from ArchDaily readers have already been as colorful as the pavilion itself - with criticisms ranging from "worst Serpentine Gallery Pavilion ever" to "trash bag monster" and a few other comparisons that I'd rather not even repeat. This may surprise some people, but at ArchDaily we do actually read the comments section, and we get it: unless you're the brave and persistent soul who comments as "notyourproblem," who thinks "it must be exciting getting inside those tunnels," there's a good chance that you hate this pavilion - and I don't use the word "hate" lightly.

But is this violent dismissal warranted? In short, is SelgasCano's pavilion as bad as you probably think it is? Fortunately, we're not the only publication giving the pavilion extensive coverage: as usual the Serpentine Gallery has attracted a number of the UK's most well-known critics. Find out what they thought of the pavilion after the break.

SelgasCano's Serpentine Pavilion: "Cheap Plastic Bag" or "Pop-Art Inflatable Funscape"? - Image 1 of 4SelgasCano's Serpentine Pavilion: "Cheap Plastic Bag" or "Pop-Art Inflatable Funscape"? - Image 2 of 4SelgasCano's Serpentine Pavilion: "Cheap Plastic Bag" or "Pop-Art Inflatable Funscape"? - Image 3 of 4SelgasCano's Serpentine Pavilion: "Cheap Plastic Bag" or "Pop-Art Inflatable Funscape"? - Image 4 of 4SelgasCano's Serpentine Pavilion: Cheap Plastic Bag or Pop-Art Inflatable Funscape? - More Images