Architectural Review, The
View more issues: August 2004, Sept 2004, Nov 2004
Articles in Oct 2004 issue of Architectural Review, The
- Design for the emerging world
- Errata
- Unfurling the outskirts: Canada's new spirit emerges from prosperity, social democracy and environmental consciousness
by Brian Carter - House on the hill: in pursuit of a plain architecture suited to an austere landscape, this house is honed to formal essence
- Speed, simplicity and clarity are the three essentials in a website, and the greatest of these is speed
by Sutherland Lyall - Diary
- Quartier renaissance: with two new buildings and two new public squares, Montreal has been busy correcting the mistakes of the 1960s
by Annette Lecuyer - Beauty in the eye of the beholder
by Sutherland Lyall - Surreal technology?
by Neil Spiller - Winding through the woods: to celebrate the cultures of the aboriginal peoples of Quebec and the natural landscapes in which they evolved, this pavilion in the Montreal Botanical Garden evocatively enhances and responds to the woods in which it is set
by Brian Carter - Mysteries in the library
by John Winter - Shaw production: a sensitive addition, carefully knitted to a distinguished theatre, provides new facilities and civilized spaces for staff and public alike
- Bernard's beautiful buildings
by Sutherland Lyall - Architectural curate's egg
by Colin Davies - Lighting the community: this luminous centre carefully responds to the topography, climate and the needs of the community
by Brian Carter - Lighting: Rob Gregory flicks the switch on new lighting products
by Rob Gregory - Blobmeister eschews back button
by Sutherland Lyall - Practical experiment: as the first phase of a new campus, KPMB attempt to resolve the site's awkward geometry and topography
by Brian Carter - Specifier's information
- Health: why so uninspired?
by John Jenner - Dreaming spheres
by Sutherland Lyall - Heroine mistreated
by Charlotte Ellis - Merritt distinction: within an area of previously untouched forest in British Columbia, a new technical institute seeks to merge aboriginal heritage and modern day sustainability
by Rob Gregory - Hunt the button
by Sutherland Lyall - Offene Raume/Public Spaces: Boris Podrecca
- Venetian anthropology
by Catherine Slessor - Shim fit: Rundles restaurant and tower house in a riverside setting in Stratford, Ontario
- Dani Freixes and Varis Arquitectes
- Letter from a layman
- Creche panache: by creating a complex series of small, enfolded spaces, the architects have tried to make this creche into a series of places with which little children can identify
- Building as icon
by Graham McKay - A philosophical toy, based on nineteenth-century technology, is housed in a modern display case to enhance ambiguously the campus of the University of British Columbia
by Brian Carter - Flat, originally poorly planned and with few noteworthy buildings, Toronto is beginning to raise its aspirations
by Christine Samuelian - Well conceived: a new walk-in clinic in downtown Vancouver