22 May 2008
I am handing in my university work tomorrow. For those of you that may be interested here is an image of my design. My scheme is a sports centre aimed at encouraging children to partake in regular exercise.
Posted by Guest Writers in └ P+HS Student Work
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20 May 2008
The government has appointed Steve Quartermain to its new role of chief planner.
Currently executive director of Hambleton District Council, Quartermain will spearhead the government’s aim to reform the country’s ailing planning system.
One of his primary roles will be helping local councils to address the current skills and workforce shortage.
Quartermain said: ‘I am delighted to take up this role. It is a challenging and exciting time for planners in government, councils and throughout the profession.
‘My aim as chief planner is to make a positive contribution toward ensuring that planning promotes the development of prosperous and vibrant communities.’
Housing minister Caroline Flint added: ‘This is an important appointment. The new chief planner will play a vital role shaping the future of planning.
‘Steve will also help drive forward our ambitions to improve the skills and capacity of planners across the profession,’ she added.
Posted by Guest Writers in Clients + colleagues, Misc, P+HS news, Planning + guidance
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31 Mar 2008
“The recently complete Walkergate Hospital in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne is providing a revolutionary combination of facilities for people with neurological disabilities, and a therapeutic physical environment that is being studied for its impact on patient outcomes.”
BD features Walkergate Park in March. Completed by Team Bentley, this unique facility is receiving lots of praise. Have a look at the article here
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc, P+HS news, Practice promotion, └ Health
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20 Mar 2008
CABE and the Housing Corporation have announced a new toolkit developed to help housing clients and their design teams demonstrate to planners and funding agencies how their development proposals will meet Building for Life standards.
Building for Life standards have now been adopted by both the Corporation and English Partnerships and increasing numbers of local authorities are now demanding that house builders must fulfil a majority of the 20 Building for Life criteria.
CABE, which developed the toolkit for the Corporation, says the aim is to get all sides using the same design language to assess proposals. The guidance provides examples of design-related material – diagrams, plans, visuals and models – clients can include in grant application tenders or design and access statements.
The Corporation, for its part, says it also regards the toolkit as an assessment tool that will help funding bodies and planners judge whether proposals are up to scratch.
The new toolkit, entitled ‘Evaluating housing principles step by step,’ is available to download for free from http://www.buildingforlife.org/
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc, Planning + guidance, RIBA Practice Bulletins
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14 Mar 2008
Heathrow Airport’s controversial Terminal 5 is set to be opened by the Queen in a ceremony involving hundreds of airport and construction workers. The £4.3bn terminal offers extra passenger capacity although the number of flights will not increase after it opens for business on 27 March.
Operator BAA says it will “transform” the level of service at the airport.
Environmental and residents groups who have opposed it say it will lead to more flights, noise and pollution.
The Queen, who in 1955 opened the airport’s first terminal building, what is now Terminal 2, will be accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh along with 800 invited guests, including hundreds of airport and construction workers involved in the project.
Some 60,000 people have worked a total of 100 million man hours to build Terminal 5 since construction began in September 2002!
Built on the site of a former sludge works at the western end of the existing airport, Terminal 5 has been designed by 2006 Stirling Prize winners Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners.
Its construction has involved diverting two rivers, building what is claimed to be the UK’s largest free-standing building and tunnelling 13km for rail and baggage links.
The complex includes 50 new aircraft stands, which will rise to 60 by 2010, two satellite buildings, one of which is still to be completed, rail links to London Underground and the Heathrow Express, and a new multi-storey car park. Friday’s official opening is of the project’s Phase 1, including Terminals 5A and 5B. Phase 2, which adds Terminal 5C, is set to open in 2010.
Posted by Guest Writers in World Architecture
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13 Mar 2008
Having told BSF schools designers to try harder, CABE is prescribing an increased dose of high quality design for the NHS LIFT programme for primary health care centres. The design champion has also called for schemes falling below its ‘excellent’ benchmark for design criteria not to be approved for construction. CABE surveyed a sample of 20 out of 82 LIFT projects completed between 2002 and 2006 and concluded that only 40% of its design criteria – looking at functionality, build quality and impact – scored ‘good’ and better. Only 7% of design criteria actually met its excellent rating. The agency has also called for project delivery teams to be strengthened through more design training and the support of committed client design advisors.
‘The LIFT programme is the NHS’s biggest ever investment in improving and developing premises for primary and community frontline services, so every one of those new buildings should contribute positively to the health and well-being of the local community,’ says Mairi Johnson, CABE’s interim director of enabling. ‘Great schemes such as the Heart of Hounslow and the Plowright Surgery in Norfolk show the kind of quality we want to see routinely.’
Good design features of the buildings surveyed included a single reception point on entering a building, which can offer an early welcome and easy orientation and generous amounts of light and ventilation. Areas of design weakness found in the sample survey include prioritising maintenance over the quality of the patient environment, resulting in the use of materials that create an overly institutional atmosphere.
The briefing paper ‘Assessing design quality in LIFT primary care buildings’ can be found here.
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc, Planning + guidance, └ Health
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6 Mar 2008
Once again, P+HS are featured in Yorkshire’s Top 50 Architects league table, ranked in 9th place – an increase of 3 places since last year.
The annual league table, published by the Yorkshire Post, features the top 50 Architects, ranked by the number of registered architects.
Have a look…
Posted by Guest Writers in P+HS news
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27 Feb 2008
Following a high standard and large volume of entrants into the RICS Renaissance Awards 2008, it has been announced that Walkergate Park Hospital has been short listed in the Community Benefit and the Sustainability category.
The category winners and overall Project of the Year winner will be announced on 18 April 2008.
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc
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21 Feb 2008
Tim Soar, photographer to the very best in architecture, was commissioned by the AJ to photograph 52 significant practices, with photos appearing each week in the AJ over a year and the shot you see above is P+HS in Stokesley. The series later included the 40 under 40 Corus/AJ winners. The photos initially appeared at an exhibition in London a little while ago.
He’s now widened that to around 100 to add major practices and these are featured in an enlarged exhibition currently on show at the RIBA, and each practice also has a display board illustrating the work of the practices. The Guardian recently published a review of the exhibition, which you can find here.
The exhibition is STILL on until FEBRUARY 29th at the RIBA – go an have a look if you can [CJP's going on Wed 27th].
With thanks to Lorna Soar for help, corrections and kind words!
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4 Feb 2008
The MIMA in Middlesbrough’s Bauhaus exhibition closes on 17 Feb, for those who haven’t been there yet…check the site
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25 Jan 2008
The UK’s first Internet “fibre town” could go online in the autumn, delivering Internet speeds of about 100Mbps (megabits per second) to consumers’ homes via new fibre optic networks.
Fibre firm ‘H2O’ provides super-fast broadband via the sewers; saving costly and disruptive road digging, and either Bournemouth, Northampton or Dundee will be offered the service first. These three have been selected because ‘H20′ has already installed its fibre service to local council buildings.
Last month BT announced that its own ‘fibre-to-the-home’ trial at Ebbsfleet in Kent would see the first homes connected by August of this year but this will initially be limited to around 600 new houses. The development will eventually have some 10,000 homes connected via fibre with speeds of up to 100Mbps but the project will take until 2020 to complete.
The current telecommunications system was never designed to carry large amounts of data and many have called for an urgent fibre upgrade. The mega-fast service will have instant appeal for consumers, and local businesses (i.e. for regular server updates between offices, etc).
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc
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17 Jan 2008
English Partnerships’ standards were revised in November, reintroducing minimum space standards for new homes on their sites. These standards go beyond the old Parker Morris standards of the 1960′s (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parker_Morris_Committee). New housing projects for English Partnerships’ sites will require dwellings to be a minimum of 51m2 for a 1 bed, rising to a minimum of 106m2 for a 4 bed (6 person) home.
England and Wales are the only countries in Europe with no minimum space standards for new housing.
The vast majority of private and public sector schemes we undertake will not require these standards but there is some useful design guidance on layout, storage etc on this imaginatively-titled website: www.swingacat.info
Posted by Guest Writers in Statutory & Legislation, └ Housing
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21 Dec 2007
The government’s Carbon Challenge competition has produced its first winner – Barratt Developments, working with HTA architects and Arup among others, will build Britain’s first ‘eco-village’ on the site of the former Hanham Hall Hospital near Bristol.
Though on a more-modest, and many would argue more sensible scale, than the eco-towns, the Carbon Challenge schemes will have to go beyond zero carbon homes to inject a broader vision of ‘eco-lifestyle’. Hanhall Hall is to get rainwater capture, sustainable drainage, farmers’ shops, a car club and bicycle storage, while the main grade-ll listed building will be converted for community use. Onsite biomass CHP, supplying all homes in the scheme, will help achieve the requisite Level 6 in the Code for Sustainable Homes.
From RIBA Practice bulletin 427)
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc, └ Housing
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17 Dec 2007
Design for Homes runs an awards system each year. Backed by the Home Builders Federation, CABE, Design for Homes, English Partnerships, the Housing Corporation and the Civic Trust, the awards celebrate well designed homes and neighbourhoods. Have a look here for details of the winners in 2007.
The criteria for good schemes can be found here – a good test against which to judge all our schemes? The link includes details of what they describe as “great schemes”. This guide should be referred to when completing a Building for Life standard application. It can also be used by developers as a basis for writing development briefs, and by local authorities to demand high standards of design and assess design quality.
Suggestions from us for 2008 entries to Claire Bedford please – entries due in before the end of February.
Posted by Guest Writers in Inspiration gallery, Misc, Practice promotion, └ Housing
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29 Nov 2007
Circle are the U.K.’s largest Partnership of healthcare professionals who have come together to provide accessible, 21st century healthcare to all patients. Circle has appointed design teams of international reputation to design a new generation of “compact” hospitals and clinics.
They are: Foster + Partners, Hopkins Architects and Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners. These firms have produced some of the most iconic buildings in Europe, including the Swiss Re Tower (the “Gherkin”), Lord’s Cricket Ground Mound Stand and Terminal Five at Heathrow Airport. Together with Circle, these three distinguished design firms will share knowledge and best practice around the better design of hospitals in the U.K.
The location, architecture and design of the Circle hospitals constitute a central part of our commitment to providing the highest quality patient experience. Circle will provide clinicians, associates and patients with an attractive working and visiting environment. The hospitals will be in accessible locations, provide sufficient car parking and will be set in landscaped surroundings.
Foster + Partners, Hopkins Architects and Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners will create designs that draw upon the healing properties of natural light, promote the soothing effects of colour, supply the stimulation of art and provide the reassurance offered by accessible, uncluttered internal spaces. According to Circle:
“We promote an environmentally sustainable approach to the design and construction of our buildings. Our commitment will be expressed through efficient uses of energy, the adoption of environmentally-friendly materials and the implementation of day-to-day policies of corporate social responsibility in Circle hospitals. All Circle facilities are subject to regulation by the Healthcare Commission.”
Posted by Guest Writers in Misc, Sustainable Design
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