Architecture and design news
Kempinski in line to operate North Korea's 'hotel of doom'
by Tom Walker | 02 Nov 2012
German hotel group Kempinski has emerged as the potential operator of the gigantic 105-storey Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea. Construction work on the property - which dominates the skyline in the heart of the secretive nation's capital city - initially began in 1987 but was halted due to an economic crisis following the fall of Soviet Union in 1992. The imposing building was left to rot and as a
Architects shortlisted to redesign Japan's National Stadium
by Aoife Dowling | 01 Nov 2012
The Japan Sport Council has shortlisted 11 architects to redesign Japan's new 80,000-seat Kasumigaoka National Stadium. The stadium will need to be complete in time for the country's staging of the 2019 Rugby World Cup and as part of Tokyo's bid for the 2020 Olympic Games. The finalists include Olympic stadium designers Zaha Hadid Architects and Populous. The competition, which received a total of 46 applicants, restricted entry to practices
Eco spa and leisure centre to open at Portavadie Marina
by Aoife Dowling | 01 Nov 2012
A new environmentally friendly spa and leisure centre is set to open at Portavadie Marina in Loch Fyne, Scotland by the end of 2014. Architects Stewart Associates has been appointed to design the centre, which will be powered using local sustainable technology. The project, still in the planning stages, is expected to include spa facilities, outdoor and indoor swimming pools, a gym, an exercise studio and a soft play area.
Mission Hills joins forces with Marriott to open two hotels in China
by Aoife Dowling | 31 Oct 2012
Chinese hospitlity giant Mission Hills Group has signed an agreement with Marriott International to open two hotels - The Ritz-Carlton and Renaissance Hotels - at its Mission Hills Haikou resort in Hainan, China. Located in the volcanic region of Hainan Island, the RMB$1.3bn (US$208m, £129m, 161m euro) investment will see the two hotels open in the second quarter of 2015. The Ritz-Carlton will have 180 rooms with 20 villas and
US Parrish Art Museum is set to open next week
by Aoife Dowling | 30 Oct 2012
The Parrish Art Museum in Long Island, New York, US is set to unveil its new building on 10 November 2012. Spanning a 14-acre (5.7 hectare) site in the town of Water Mill, the new 34,400sq ft (3,195sq m), Herzog & de Meuron-designed museum will be twice the size of the existing facility in Southampton and about three miles away from it. It will be the first art museum built
RIBA launches design competition for Fens visitor centre
by Tom Walker | 30 Oct 2012
RIBA Competitions has launched a two-stage Design Ideas Competition for the Great Fen Visitor Centre in Cambridgeshire. The competition is being promoted by the Great Fen - a partnership which comprises the Environment Agency, Huntingdonshire District Council, Middle Level Commissioners, Natural England and The Wildlife Trust. Great Fen plans to establish a £2m visitor centre at New Decoy Farm in Cambridgeshire and the competition is open to design teams based
Details of London's tallest attraction revealed
by Tom Walker | 26 Oct 2012
The View from The Shard (VTS), a new visitor experience located at the top of Europe's tallest building in London, will open to the public on 1 February. Details of the attraction's design were revealed for the first time today (25 October) by Anders Nyberg, VTS chief executive. The tall attraction will take people on a journey to 244m (800ft) above London, almost twice as high as any other viewing
Wellcome Collection unveils £17.5m expansion plans
by Tom Walker | 25 Oct 2012
Wellcome Collection in central London has unveiled a major £17.5m development project which will increase the attraction's available gallery space. Stirling Prize-winning architects Wilkinson Eyre will transform the venue, bringing new areas into public use and adding a dramatic new spiral staircase and interconnected galleries. The works were commissioned by the collection's owner, Wellcome Trust, as it strives to meet the demands posed by an increase in visitor numbers at
Novotel opens 'tech hotel' in London
by Aoife Dowling | 24 Oct 2012
French hotel giant Accor has opened a 'high tech' hotel in Blackfriars, London. Novotel London Blackfriars incorporates the latest technologies including tables fitted with televisions so guests dining alone will be entertained. Multimedia tables housing iPads for each guest also offer a selection of apps with the latest news items, information on events and what's happening in London. A further set of iPads with a range of games to keep
Parkroyal set to open hotel-in-a-garden
by Aoife Dowling | 22 Oct 2012
Hotel operator Pan Pacific Hotels Group is set to open Parkroyal on Pickering, a hotel and spa in Singapore, based on a hotel-in-a-garden concept, at the end of 2012. The hotel is located at the gateway to Singapore's Central Business District and landmarks such as Chinatown and China Square Central. Designed by Singapore-based architectural firm WOHA, Parkroyal was built with a strong focus on integrating environmental elements throughout the property.
New bridge to let visitors bounce across the Seine?
by Kath Hudson | 22 Oct 2012
Bouncing and jumping across the Seine on a giant trampoline could be a possibility if plans unveiled by Atelier Zundel Cristea are taken on board. The proposal was put forward for an ideas competition for a new bridge in Paris, which called for a new icon or landmark to add to the 37 bridges across the Seine. “It appears to us that Paris already has the bridges and passages necessary
Architect named for luxury Manchester hotel
by Tom Walker | 22 Oct 2012
The Peel Group has appointed architects Allies & Morrison to design its new luxury hotel project in Manchester. Architects from across Europe were invited to take part in a competition - organised by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) - to design the hotel, which will be located on the site of the former Worsley New Hall in Greater Manchester. Worsley New Hall was a historically significant manor house
Luxury hotel and spa to open at historic Armagh jail
by Aoife Dowling | 19 Oct 2012
It held murderers and madmen behind its walls for three centuries but now one of Northern Ireland's most notorious jails Armagh Gaol is a step closer to becoming a luxury hotel and spa. A planning application has been submitted which seeks to redevelop the former Armagh prison into a mixed-use property that will provide a 65-bed hotel with a spa and conference facilities as well as an education and heritage
£125m casino complex to open in Birmingham
by Aoife Dowling | 18 Oct 2012
Resort Worlds Birmingham leisure complex is set to open at the National Exhibition Centre (NEC) in Birmingham by January 2015. It will comprise a Genting casino as well as a 176-room hotel and spa. Other facilities include a cinema and extensive conference facilities as well as a factory outlet centre. Casino operator Genting UK are beginning work on the £125m leisure complex after appointing contractor Galliford Try. This development will
Detailed plans submitted for Battersea Power Station
by Tom Walker | 17 Oct 2012
Detailed plans for the first phase of Rafael Viñoly's Battersea Power Station masterplan have now been submitted to Wandsworth Council. The project in Nine Elms in London was granted outline planning consent in 2011 and the new application provides a detailed specification for the first stage of the development. The application covers the details of the scale of the buildings and structures, the external appearance and the landscaping within Phase
Rosewood set to open second Asian resort
by Aoife Dowling | 16 Oct 2012
Rosewood hotels and resorts is to open its second Asian resort in Phuket, Thailand in 2014. Located on a 600m (1,968ft) Emerald Bay beachfront in Western Phuket, the Rosewood Phuket resort comprises 87 villas, 20 residences and five hideaway homes and a spa. The Sense Spa will feature five treatment rooms, seven spa villas with steamrooms and showers and a swimming and watsu pool. The central feature of the spa
Architecture watchdog apologises for Piano/Libeskind letter
by Tom Walker | 10 Oct 2012
The government-appointed architecture watchdog ARB (Architects Registration Board) has apologised for suggesting that Renzo Piano and Daniel Libeskind should not be described as architects in the UK press. Last week, ARB sent a letter to Building Design magazine saying that neither Piano nor Libeskind were registered with ARB - therefore being undeserving of the title. Piano is a former Pritzker Prize winner and is famous for having designed the Centre
Glasgow's Emirates Arena opens doors to the public
by Aoife Dowling | 09 Oct 2012
More than 100,000 visitors attended the opening weekend of Glasgow's new Emirates Arena. The sports arena, which opened its doors on 5 October, will play host to the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games. The 10.5-hectare arena is located beside the Commonwealth Games Athletes' Village and the Celtic Park. It will include an indoor sports arena, three sports halls with 12 badminton courts, four outdoor five-a-side football pitches, an outdoor 1km cycle
£18m Portway Lifestyle Centre is on track to open next year
by Aoife Dowling | 09 Oct 2012
Image: Work on the complex began in June 2012 The £18m Portway Lifestyle Centre in Oldbury, West Midlands is on track to open in August 2013, despite delays in construction work due to poor weather conditions over the summer months. The centre will replace the Oldbury Leisure Centre in Sandwell. Facilities will include a sports hall, hydrotherapy pool, a gym and weights area and dance studio. There will also be
Norway's 90m euro Art Museum opens to public
by Aoife Dowling | 09 Oct 2012
Norway's 90m euro (£73m US$116) contemporary art museum, the Astrup Fearnley Museum in Oslo, has opened to the public. The museum, designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, is located on the edge of a fjord and is divided into two halves by water. Renzo Piano's previous work includes Beyeler Museum in Basel, the extension of the Morgan Library in New York and the Shard in London. The museum covers an
Construction to begin on Abu Dhabi Louvre in early 2013
by Aoife Dowling | 09 Oct 2012
Construction work is to begin on Abu Dhabi Louvre, the first Louvre museum outside Paris, at the beginning of 2013. Ahmad Al Fahim, executive director of marketing at Tourism Development and Investment Company (TDIC), told the Gulf News that a construction company would be announced at the end of December. The museum is to be located on the Saadiyat Island's Cultural District complex, which will also feature a Frank Gehry-designed
First indoor Angry Birds Activity Park to open in Finland
by Aoife Dowling | 09 Oct 2012
The world's first indoor Angry Birds-themed activity park will open to the public in December, at the Vuokatti ski resort in Sotkamo, Finland. Based on the popular mobile game, the Angry Birds Land includes a number of themed rides and a large play area, and encourages visitors to exercise and play. The activity park will be constructed within the 8,700sq m (sq ft 93,600) Incap industrial estate and will form
£2bn Paramount resort planned for Kent
by Tom Walker | 08 Oct 2012
A consortium which includes US-based entertainment giant Paramount Pictures has unveiled plans to create a £2bn visitor attraction on the North Kent coast in the UK. Plans for the 872-acre development site, on the Swanscombe Peninsula, include a Paramount-branded entertainment resort and leisure district as part of what is being billed as "Europe's leading entertainment destination". The entertainment district will feature Europe's largest indoor water park, theatres, live music venues,
Sandwell Council and DC Leisure agree £11m leisure centre contract
by Kate Corney | 03 Oct 2012
Plans for an £11m leisure centre and swimming pool in West Bromwich are underway following the signing of a contract between Sandwell Council and DC Leisure. DC Leisure will design, build, manage and maintain the town centre complex, due to open in summer 2014. The leisure centre will have a 25m pool with a learner pool, a sauna and steamroom, a four-court sports hall, a 100-station fitness suite, two dance
HKS to build Minnesota stadium
by Kath Hudson | 02 Oct 2012
Texas architects HKS Sports & Entertainment Group have been appointed by the Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority and the Minnesota Vikings to design the new $975m (£600m, 750m euro) Minnesota Vikings Stadium. Scheduled to open for the 2016 football season, the stadium will host major football events, as well as community events. HKS were chosen on the back of their successful NFL stadiums in Dallas and Indianapolis, as well as their
Brooklyn stadium up and running
by Kath Hudson | 01 Oct 2012
Rapper Jay-Z kicked off the party to launch Brooklyn's new stadium last Friday, 28 September. The 18,000-seat Barclays Center is home to the Brooklyn Nets basketball team and will also be a major music venue. This is the first time in 55 years that the borough has had its own major professional sports team, which will bring great economic benefits to the area. Located in a busy shopping area, which
Technogym to unveil new Wellness Campus in Italy
by Kate Corney | 28 Sep 2012
Former US President Bill Clinton and Giorgio Napolitano, the President of Italy, will be at the opening of the Technogym Village on 29 September 2012, along with 800 other guests from more than 60 countries. The new company headquarters in Cesana represents the first Wellness Campus in the world with 60,000 m sq of covered spaces spread across the 150,000 m sq site. The Technogym Village is designed to be
Aberdeen FC considering alternative stadium sites
by Tom Walker | 26 Sep 2012
Image: AFC is seeking a new site after the Calder Park plans were voted down by the council Aberdeen Football Club (AFC) has said it has received several expressions of interest in providing a site for a new stadium. The club was forced to restart its search for a new home after plans to build a 21,000-seater ground at Calder Park in the south of the city collapsed last month.
Wirral Council announces plans for 'international golf resort'
by Tom Walker | 24 Sep 2012
Wirral Council has launched its vision for an international golf resort in Hoylake. The council is currently seeking potential developers it could partner with on the project, which - according to initial plans - would include a signature golf course and a luxury spa hotel with extensive wellness, leisure and restaurant facilities. There is currently no such resort in the area and a recent report by consultants Capita Symonds suggests
New stadium planned for Regina, Canada
by Kath Hudson | 21 Sep 2012
The City of Regina, in Canada, has unveiled new stadium plans to replace the existing Mosaic Stadium, one of the oldest buildings in the Canadian Football League. The 33,000-seater stadium has been inspired by the prairie sky and includes a sunken bowl design, a spectator roof to protect fan and louvers to control the wind. Fans will have improved comfort thanks to individual seats, with better views. To cater for
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