Venice: Myth and Reality
Nov02

Venice: Myth and Reality

The ambition of dominating the seas was celebrated through the formulation of rituals, ceremonies and myths.

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Britain after the riots
Oct11

Britain after the riots

This book presents arguments that almost completely undermine the independence of children as well as adults.

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I run therefore I am!
Oct10

I run therefore I am!

‘It is the presence of competition itself that acts as a permanent barrier between the two types of runner’

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Architectural Olympiad

‘The Stadium’ by Tim Abrahams;  Machine Books, 2012. 38pp Reviewed by Josh Broomer | 10 October 2012 ‘These 17 days may have changed this country’. So pronounced the Guardian the morning after Stephen Daldry’s closing ceremony concluded a vibrant festival of sport. The Olympic Stadium in east London provided a fitting  setting for a series of memorable track and field achievements from Usain Bolt’s second triple to David...

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Spare us from Community Engagement

By Dave Clements | 17 September 2012 What is the meaning of community today, and how it can be meaningfully engaged with? While there is no end of projects tasked with engaging communities, whether this is a meaningful activity or not is a moot point. Indeed, if we stopped trying to engage communities they might actually have a chance to breathe. To my mind, although there may be some well intentioned projects out there, all things...

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Keeping it Real in the ‘Fictitious Capital’

By Andrew Calcutt | 9 October 2012 Foolish to judge a whole book on this basis alone; but if the design on the front doesn’t give you the gist of what’s between the covers, its editors should be shot. The front cover of a new book London After Recession depicts the eponymous city as a ‘fictitious capital’, existing in a think-bubble dreamed up by a bowler-hatted gent of possibly Asian extraction. Of course the subtitle ‘a fictitious...

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Looking back today

‘Everything Was Moving: Photography from the 60s and 70s’ at the Barbican Art Gallery; 13 Sep 2012 – 13 Jan 2013. Reviewed by Pauline Hadaway | 27 September 2012 From iconic portraits of Dylan, Che and Martin Luther King, to history making shots of civil rights marchers, students on the barricades and draft card burning, many of the images that we think of as defining sixties and seventies radicalism remain part of...

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Getting planners off our backs

By Alastair Donald | 22 September  ‘This Government means business’ announced David Cameron recently, and that starts with ‘getting planners off our backs’. But as highlighted by recent initiatives which attempt to use design to make us fitter and healthier, planners are meddling more than ever in our personal affairs and lifestyle choices.  There are many aspects of the coalition government’s recent statement on Housing and Growth...

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How to win the long jump

Martin Earnshaw | 17 September 2012 Who now regards Athens as a world beating Olympic city? Today, the horror stories of abandoned stadia and rubbish strewn swimming pools, though disputed, are commonplace in media accounts of what happened to the Olympic site. The fear that the Olympic Park of 2012 may too become a wind-swept and neglected wasteland in the heart of a stubbornly run-down East London dominates the never ending debate...

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Whatever happened to Utopia?

FILM: ‘Utopia London’ by Tom Cordell, 2010 Reviewed by Rowan Morrice | 14 September 2012 It’s not often we hear about Utopia these days. An idea which used to be identified with the future, is now a purely historic phenomenon. Today when it seems we can only imagine a dystopian future, this film presents a nostalgic look back at the Modern movement in 20th Century London.  The film charts, through a series of key...

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