Architecture and design news
Plans submitted for a £1.3m Club Hub at Taunton County Ground
by Caroline Wilkinson | 16 Apr 2008
Somerset County Cricket Club has submitted plans to build a £1.3m Club Hub at the County Ground in Taunton, located next door to and interlinked with the Ondaatje Pavilion. The hub is the second part of a two-phase development scheme involved in Project Taunton, a regeneration plan for the town. It will replace the original plans for an £8m club hub which was to be located in St James car
New national showground for Scotland
by Caroline Wilkinson | 16 Apr 2008
The Royal Highland Agricultural Society for Scotland (RHASS) is funding a delivery study, to be carried out by construction firm Mace Group, for the proposed £275m Norton Park project in Edinburgh. The project is part of the relocation of The Royal Highland Centre– Scotland’s National Showground for 150 events and the headquarters of the RHASS, which is being forced to move due the expansion of Edinburgh Airport, planned for 2013.
Harrow to invest in eco-friendly gym
by Tom Walker | 16 Apr 2008
Harrow Council has unveiled plans to build one of the most environmentally friendly leisure centres in the country. The eco-friendly plans for the £37.2m centre include reclaiming 800 cubic metres of rainwater per year from the roof, enough to fill the 25m swimming pool twice over, and harnessing outgoing warm air from the swimming pool, reducing the cost of heating the building by 75 per cent. The council also plans
Groucho Club gets green light
by Tom Walker | 15 Apr 2008
HKR Architects have been granted planning permission for their designs for the extension of the famed Groucho Club in Soho. Plans for the private social club include a four-storey extension which will include new bedrooms as well as a complete refurbishment of the existing accommodation. Gordon Pickering, chief executive of the London office of HKR said: “We’ve enjoyed working on this project for the past 12 months and steering it
Camden’s Prince of Wales Baths get lifeline
by Caroline Wilkinson | 08 Apr 2008
After years of political wrangling, planning permission has been given for the refurbishment of Camden’s historic Victorian Prince of Wales Baths. The £25m refurbishment will start in May. The Baths, now known as Kentish Town Sports Centre, will retain three swimming pools while a dance studio, 125-station health suite and new changing facilities will also be added. The 33 1/3-yard Willes pool will be refurbished and the Grafton pool downsized
People’s History Museum revamp gets underway
by Tom Walker | 07 Apr 2008
Work has begun on the £12.2m redevelopment of the People's History Museum in Manchester. The redevelopment of the site will see the museum double in size and consolidate its current two sites into one via an extension. The extension has been designed by architects Austin-Smith:Lord, with Headland Desing Associates responsible for the exhibition design. Funding for the project has come from the Heritage Lottery Fund (£7.18m), Manchester City Council (£2m),
Plans for £40m Edinburgh hotel development revealed
by Luke Tuchscherer | 04 Apr 2008
A £40m hotel development is being planned in Edinburgh on a site ravaged by fire in 2002. Located in South Bridge/Cowgate, the site was previously host to the J&R Allan department store – home to the Gilded Balloon comedy venue, Bridge Jazz Bar and La Belle Angele nightclub – which was destroyed by a major blaze that attracted worldwide attention. The new scheme – called SoCo – is the brainchild
£67m Joint Service Centre planned for Wigan
by Luke Tuchscherer | 03 Apr 2008
A £67m public service hub, featuring leisure and learning facilities, is being planned for Wigan. The complex – to be called the Joint Service Centre – will boast a 25m swimming pool, a fitness centre and a new library, with the aim of being a one-stop shop for public services. The centre is being funded by private finance initiative (PFI) credits, for which Wigan Council had to compete against 100
Historic Scotland questions Leith Docks plans
by Tom Walker | 02 Apr 2008
Heritage watchdog Historic Scotland has warned that the planned regeneration of Leith Docks could threaten Edinburgh’s historic skyline. In a letter to the city council, Historic Scotland voices its concerns over plans to include tall buildings within the mixed-use scheme. The plans – the biggest planning application ever to come before the local authority – were handed in last year and a decision is expected by the end of this
Lama win for Letterkenny
by Tom Walker | 31 Mar 2008
Aura Letterkenny Leisure Centre, which opened last summer in Ireland, was recently named Best Sporting Facility at the Local Authority Members Association (LAMA) Awards. The Letterkenny Leisure Centre, managed by Aura on behalf of Letterkenny Town Council, was designed by Holohan Architects who, like Aura, are part of the Holohan Group. The centre includes a 25-metre swimming pool, kiddies’ and learner pool, a water slide, gym, health suite, multi-purpose sports
Architects announced for Spanish arts quarter
by Tom Walker | 31 Mar 2008
London-based David Chipperfield Architects (DCA) has been appointed to create the masterplan for a new arts and technology quarter in Segovia, Spain. According to the brief, the new 120,000sq m area of town will comprise an art museum, a technology centre, a hotel and a congress centre. According to DCA, the early designs of the new quarter have been inspired by the historic city’s walls and narrow irregular streets. A
‘Bistro on the Bridge’ to open in Hull
by Tom Walker | 19 Mar 2008
Urban regeneration company Hull Citybuild has announced plans to open a restaurant on a linking bridge it is constructing as part of The Boom development on the Hull waterfront. Citybuild says that the eatery, which has been given the working name ‘Bistro on the Bridge’, will offer diners a unique experience as they will be able to remain on the bridge as it opens and closes for boats passing on
ODA appoints Olympic Park designer
by Tom Walker | 19 Mar 2008
The Olympic Delivery Authority has appointed LDA Design and US-based landscape architects Hargreaves Associates to design the Olympic Park for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. The designers will be tasked with developing detailed proposals for the open spaces in the Olympic Park for the Games. A significant aspect of the design brief will be to incorporate usage for the legacy of the park. The 2.5sq km Olympic Park
Dinosaurs take over Australian Museum
by Tim Nash | 17 Mar 2008
The Australian Museum in Sydney has unveiled a new 650sq m permanent exhibition exploring the pre-historic world of predator and prey. The Dinosaurs exhibition is split into four areas: Dinosaur World, Dinosaur Life, Discovering Dinosaurs and Surviving Dinosaurs. The creatures are brought to life through a range of hands-on fossil specimens, models, skeletons, touch screen computers, interactives, dramatic lighting effects and projected scenes. Visitors can make sounds like a crested
Doncaster plans £300m cultural quarter
by Tom Walker | 06 Mar 2008
Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council has announced plans for a £300m Civic and Cultural Quarter (CCQ) in the city’s Waterdale district. The council aims to regenerate 10 hectares – around 25 per cent – of the city centre, providing leisure amenities, housing, Doncaster’s first public square and a new performance venue. The scheme will be delivered in four stages over six to eight years, with the final phase expected to be
Yuan Spa opens in Shanghai
by Tom Walker | 05 Mar 2008
The Yuan Spa – the largest spa in Asia, according to Hyatt – has opened at the new Hyatt on the Bund hotel in Shanghai. The 3,000sq m spa features 12 treatment rooms, a 25m pool, a fitness centre, a salon and a juice bar, plus a range of whirlpools, plunge pools, steam, sauna and relaxation rooms. Designed by US-based design company Remedios Siembieda, the interior of Yuan Spa mixes
New eco friendly eatery for London
by Tom Walker | 05 Mar 2008
The team behind eco friendly restaurant Acorn House have taken their ideas one step further with the Water House Restaurant, recently opened in Shoreditch, London. Owned by charitable regeneration agency the Shoreditch Trust, Water House serves seasonal, locally-sourced organic produce. Roof-mounted solar panels provide hot water for the restaurant and photovoltaic cells produce renewable electricity. Other environmentally-friendly measures include paperless menus and a cooling and heating system which uses the
Design chosen for Brockholes scheme
by Luke Tuchscherer | 27 Feb 2008
Lancashire Wildlife Trust (LWT) has unveiled plans to transform the Brockholes Wetlands and Woodland Nature Reserve, near Preston, into a “floating world”. London-based Adam Khan Architects’ design – which features a cluster of buildings constructed largely of wood and other sustainable materials – was chosen as the winner of a competition run by the Royal Institute of British Architects to transform the former brownfield site. The “floating world” resembles an
Hadid’s design for Michigan State University Art Museum chosen
by Luke Tuchscherer | 20 Feb 2008
London-based architect Zaha Hadid has had her design for the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University in the US, chosen for the US$30m (£15.4m, 20.4m euro) project. Baghdad-born Hadid’s design beat off competition from Coop Himmelb(l)au, Morphosis, Kohn Pedersen Fox and Randall Scott. The project is largely being funded by Eli Broad – who is a Michigan State alumnus – and his wife Edythe, who are
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