Architecture
We need social housing, not gentrified ghettos
Our cities have a democratic deficit
What is it like to live in Pyongyang?
Architects and urban planners met in Seoul to discuss the North Korean capital—and political tensions on the peninsula
After 40 years of professional oblivion, Neave Brown’s RIBA award is thoroughly deserved
The great architect was caught in the crossfire during a political battle over housing in the 1970s—but has emerged utterly vindicated
London’s nowhere neighbourhood
London is building a new district where no local can afford to live
Architecture: The slow ruin of Edinburgh
The planting of a "Golden Turd" in the heart of the city reveals grotesquely skewed planning priorities
The ugliest buildings in Britain
Tastes change. But poor quality never comes into style
Great architecture comes from collaboration—Brexit would be bad for our buildings
The free movement of labour has enriched my discipline
Can Syria rise from the ashes?
Syrians are thinking creatively about how to rebuild their country
Why buildings matter
What Britain can learn from Portugal
Zaha Hadid always pursued the maximal
The architect—immensely popular despite being truly radical—has died following a heart attack aged 65
Architecture would be less interesting without Zaha Hadid
Hadid’s designs force us to engage in and widen the architectural debate
If I ruled the world: Richard Rogers
Well-designed cities are a human right