All Building articles in Building 160 - Supplement

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  • Features

    Love the car

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    The funny thing about technology is that most of the time, progress grinds along incrementally – but then suddenly, even unpredictably, there's an explosion that changes our entire world. Take two technologies that have a lot to do with cities and city life: transport and communications. And, since we're looking ...

  • Features

    Welcome 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    To celebrate the occasion of its 160th birthday, Building has done something young and foolish: it has tried to predict what's going to happen over the next 30 years or so. Big subject, the future.

  • Features

    Wilson 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    Nostradamus didn't say anything about what the construction industry would look like in 2033.

  • Features

    Technology 160 - 2033 Site

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    The building project of the future will be a model of rationality. If the initial design is good, and the system is operated properly, the process of procuring and erecting a building will be an elaborate, computer-choreographed dance in which many hundreds of people will perform precisely the right steps ...

  • Features

    Technology 160 - 2033 Home

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    In the UK, 30 years is not a long time in housing. If we were transported back in time to 1973, we would be astonished by the archaic design of cars, telephones, hair and instant coffee, but we would be at home in the houses. So it is safe to ...

  • Features

    Technology 160 - 2033 Office

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    The office of the future will contain much of the same furniture as the office of the present, but a lot of the equipment and objects will go. Say sayonara to the fax, copier, shredder and shelf after shelf of lever-arch files. Instead, information will be stored on servers and ...

  • Features

    Space 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    Nostalgia has already set in for the nuclear family. The semi-detached suburban utopia of 2.4 children, plus dog – not to mention the gas-guzzling car in the driveway – now only exists in the sweetly sentimental works of the poet John Betjeman. Today's image of the typical family appears dystopic ...

  • Features

    Environment 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    Life on the edgeWe think of global warming the way a smoker thinks about lung cancer. We know, in a distant, abstract way, that what we are doing could have some serious consequences for our health, but we solve the problem by refusing to think about it. Smokers shy away ...

  • Features

    Business 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    Extract from Building, 18 July 2033:So, after all the speculation, the shortlist for main contractor on London One, the world largest office complex, has been narrowed down to two candidates. It's no surprise that the global powerhouse of Bechtel Beatty made the cut for the *8bn project – it has ...

  • Features

    Society 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    "… and on BBC9, Harlan Davis' How Did We Get Here examines social change in the first three decades of the 21st century; this week its the turn of the built environment". A 3D image of Harlan, looking a bit of a prat in his trademark leather trousers, appears on ...

  • Features

    Meades 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z

    Go to a fully accredited tourist village in any European country – Ireland, Germany, France, wherever. We all know these places – steeped in the romance of history, sweating heritage, foetid with feudal associations and so on. We will certainly find examples of the vernacular architecture peculiar to their area, ...

  • News

    Technology 160

    2003-07-04T00:00:00Z