Interviews with Architects – Page 2

  • Bloxham
    Features

    The Tom Bloxham interview

    2011-11-04T00:00:00Z

    For 20 years, renowned regeneration company Urban Splash grew and grew. Then in 2008 the bottom fell out of the market and soon after the firm found itself on the ‘brink of collapse’. Its founder tells Emily Wright how it changed everything - and nothing

  • Ken Shuttleworth
    Features

    Ken Shuttleworth: No more crazy shapes & silly profiles

    2011-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Ken Shuttleworth, the man behind the Gherkin, doesn’t ’get’ the Shard, reckons the era of tall glass boxes is over and thinks a lot of designers are really egotistical. So why does the founder of Make think this is such a great time to be an architect? He tells Building.

  • Zaha1
    Features

    Who's afraid of Zaha Hadid?

    2011-05-05T00:00:00Z

    London developers are, says the world-renowned architect. But that’s not going to stop her increasing her presence in the UK and following up her aquatics centre success with tall buildings in the capital. She talks about work, high points and low - and why her clubbing days are over

  • Andy von Bradsky
    Features

    Andy Von Bradsky: A man of parts

    2011-04-15T00:00:00Z

    At the heart of Andy Von Bradsky’s business strategy as boss of PRP is a paradox: to survive as an architect, you have to stop just being an architect. It’s time we used all the skills at our disposal, he says

  • Ab Rogers
    Features

    Remixed: Ab Rogers interview

    2011-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Ab Rogers, son of Richard, flopped at school, became a hippy, and is, by his own father’s judgment, ’pretty crazy’. None of that stops him being a sought after UK designer trusted with designs for the likes of Pizza Express and the Fat Duck. Meet a true individual

  • John Drew Issue05
    Features

    John Drew: The new power house

    2011-02-04T00:00:00Z

    For years, John Drew has been best known as the architect who advised on the masterplan for Battersea Power Station. Now he’s joined forces with Jack Pringle and has a possible £300m worth of schemes on the horizon. Emily Wright finds him in bullish mood

  • Wilkinson Eyre
    Features

    Wilkinson Eyre: Twin peaks

    2010-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Ten years ago Building interviewed a young architectural practice called Wilkinson Eyre. A decade and two Stirling prizes later, we return to ask its principals how it feels to become part of the design establishment - and on the top of their game.

  • Left to right: David Leventhal, Lee Polisano and Ron Bakker consider the possibility that it will rain later …
    Comment

    PLP: So business is looking up?

    2010-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Remember the Polisano crew who busted out of Kohn Pedersen Fox and started up on their own? That must have been a year ago now. Emily Wright found out what happened to them next

  • Steven Holl
    Features

    Steven Holl: After Mackintosh

    2010-05-07T00:00:00Z

    For most people in the UK, Steven Holl is the best architect they’ve never heard of. Now he’s tackling the world-famous Glasgow School of Art, that’s about to change

  • Features

    BDP's Peter Drummond: The revolutionary in carpet slippers

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    BDP, Britain’s biggest architect, is better known for quiet competence than daring. But this is the firm that defied Tesco, beat the downturn, expanded into India and Libya and doesn’t give a fig for profit. Chief executive Peter Drummond tells Roxane McMeeken all about it

  • Features

    Peter Morrison: RMJM’s business model

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Peter Morrison, chief executive of Scotland’s best known architect, explains his hiring policies (which include Sir Fred Goodwin), and how RMJM turned itself into an international success story

  • Features

    So long, Sunand: the outgoing RIBA president reflects

    2009-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Regrets? He’s had a few. But then again, too few to mention – unless pushed. Sunand Prasad, the outgoing president of the RIBA gives Dan Stewart a list of his achievements while in office, and fighting Prince Charles was only one of them

  • Ruth Reed wants to change people’s views of the RIBA – and becoming the institute’s first woman president isn’t a bad place to start
    Features

    Reed out loud: the RIBA's first woman president

    2009-06-05T00:00:00Z

    Ruth Reed wants to change people’s views of the RIBA – and becoming the institute’s first woman president isn’t a bad place to start. She talks to Dan Stewart about her priorities for her two-year stint, the recession and how she hopes to make the RIBA less London-centric

  • Features

    Robert Stern: designing Dubya's library

    2008-11-07T00:00:00Z

    Architect and academic Robert Stern is to design a library for the outgoing president of the United States. The joke going around, of course, is that it must be a fairly small building. Dan Stewart found out

  • Prizefighter: Howells’ Savill building in Windsor Great Park is up for the Stirling
    Features

    Glenn Howells: Almost famous

    2007-09-14T00:00:00Z

    Robert Plant, Ozzy Osbourne, Noddy Holder … the Midlands has produced its fair share of rock stars. Sadly, frustrated musician Glenn Howells wasn’t one of them. But now, with a Stirling prize nomination to his name, the Birmingham architect is about to get his turn in the limelight.

  • Features

    Bouygues’ battle for Britain

    2007-07-13T00:00:00Z

    As the 10th anniversary of the French company’s entry into the UK approaches, its managing director tells Mark Leftly about his plans to expand all over the country