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                  <text>Many NAM members were engaged in the field of architectural education, either as staff or students, and&#13;
pursued new ideas for course content and pedagogy, reassessing existing course structures and priorities in&#13;
conventional architectural training. The concern to focus on socially necessary buildings and to find new and meaningful&#13;
ways of engaging with building users and the wider community- both central NAM themes - illuminated much of the discussion.</text>
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                <text>RIBA humiliation over education</text>
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                <text>BUILDING DESIGN, May 22. 1987 3&#13;
 News&#13;
 &#13;
Stirling revision for City&#13;
JAMES Stirling•s long-awaited rew;ions to his scheme for Peter Palumbo's redevelopment of Mansion House Square have been placed before City planners and should bc considered next month.&#13;
Revision only been made to "Scheme B". the design Which involves the demolition of all the buildings on the triangular site. includtng the Mapping &amp; Webb corner building.&#13;
A storey has been temo•.ed because Stirling•s early design did not comply with the City's now plot ratio rules.&#13;
There is also increased shop• ping space and further improvement to the Bank Underground   station exit.&#13;
   "lhe alternative scheme. which&#13;
 &#13;
 retains Mappin &amp; Webb. rematns the same, A city spokesman said that Palumbo is assare of the planners' "fundamental objections•• to its hetght. Review over Docklands&#13;
NICK Grimshaw•s Ladkarns building on the Isle of Dogs may be physically moved to a site in Newham. possibly the Royal Docks, to make way for the Canary Wharf development.&#13;
Meanwhile a new building which may be built for Ladkarns by Gnmshaws in Dollar Bay. Isle of Dogs. vs upsetting local residents.&#13;
They feel the new building wilt destroy their view of the docks. depress property pricesand that the noise will increase tn the area.&#13;
In its fight to stop the construction of the building the Glen Terrace Residents' Association has won a judicial rev.ew of the decision.&#13;
Festival&#13;
rr3&#13;
 site plan&#13;
A E 100 million mixed scheme  designed by the Mason Richards Partnership is to be developed on the Sha Garden Festival Site   in Stoke-on-Trent.&#13;
 of the  mplus scheme. St Modwen Properues. was chosen by the local council from a total of 18 applicants — including London &amp; Edinburgh Trust.&#13;
The proposals include a 26.S00sq m retatl park. S.400sq m of offices/studtos. a ccrarmc trade and exhibition centre,  m of industnal accom• modatton. a 12•scrcen cinema. bowling alley. dry ski-slope. an Indoor letsure centre and a 200bed hotel. Cambridge confusion&#13;
A COMPETITION-winning design Cambridge Untverstty may be dropped in favour of a cheaper design-build solution. Last July Colquhoun &amp; Miller beat a prestig•ous group of archttects in a limited competition for a mar»r development on the Addenbrook's Hospital site.&#13;
RIBA argument who &#13;
RIBA has suffered a humiliating defeat in its battle to impose its "ill on the Architects Registration Council.&#13;
At the first mcetingof Arcuk's neulv elected board of architectural education. members voted 34-13 to re-appoint Professor Denys Hinton as chairman.&#13;
Previously an RIBA nominee to the board. Hinton was dropped by the institute when he refused to try to reverse Arcuk decisions on education (News March 20).&#13;
But Hinton was nominated for the board by the Portsmouth school and defeated the official R I BA candidate. Joyce Lowman. in the election for the chair.&#13;
'I his was despite intense lobbying by the institute, which wrote to all its members on the board urging them to vote for its • •on-tcial candidate".&#13;
Completing the snub to the RIBA. the board re-elected Professor Ben Farmer to the vice-chairman's post against the RIBA's choice. Alan Willis.&#13;
Last week's results follow a similar victory in March for Ken Tay lor against Go rdon Gra ham in the election for the vice• chairman's post on Arcuk Council.&#13;
Following last 's elections the board reatiirrncd its policy to seek joint RIBA/Arcuk %isiting hoards.&#13;
Following his election. Hinton&#13;
Council architect arrested&#13;
LIVERPOOL chief architect James Rohh has been suspended by the council follouing his arrest last by the city's fraud squad.&#13;
Robb. a Labour councillor for&#13;
Knowsley. and three of Fleet (Liserpool) Ltd. a building contractor. "ere all arrested in a police swoop last Friday morning.&#13;
Robb arrested as he arrived at his Dale Street office for work.&#13;
The men have been released on bail pending further inquiries. No charges tune been brought. hut detectives are examining docu• ments and files seized during their søoop.&#13;
Robb and the other men were questioned by police in connection Bith the granting of contracts by the council.&#13;
A council spokesman told BD that Robb's position with the council bould bc revieued "hen the police in•estigations were concluded.&#13;
Robb•s application for early retirement (News March 27) has been frozen. and the department is non being run by deputy chief architect Brian Weir.&#13;
Robb had infuriated his staff recently by drawing up a secret report recommending the fragmentation and reduction in sizeof the architects department.&#13;
He had planned to retire and emigrate to California "here his "ife•s family runs a property business.&#13;
By John Wood&#13;
But the umverslty recently commisqoncd another scheme from 'T Destgn. Build. although the origtnal architects appo•ntnent has not been officially nccjled. humiliation in over runs education&#13;
 said: "I want to ensure that the intensity.&#13;
board can carry out its statutory A seasoned politician who is a functions effectively and member of Barnet council and responsibly. " who served on the defunct&#13;
He also hoped that there Greater London Council. would be an early end to the antagonism between Arcuk and such a heated meeting in my lite."&#13;
Michael Darke, secretary of the Standing Conference of Heads of Schools of Archithe RIBA which had marked the tecture, who proposed Iltnton last three months. said: "The RIBA must now Hinton described the meeting acknowledge that Arcuk has a as amicable. but Ellis Hillman.a duty to become more directly lay member of thc board since involved in the validation 1973. was shocked by its process."&#13;
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South Bank scheme&#13;
'Il IF, Roval Fine Art Commission • I'ed Bowman. chairman Of the has persoaded Philip Johnson to North South»ark Community reduce the height and bulk of his I)oeloprnent Group, attacked design for the second phase of Southwark council's ruling Iondon Bridge City. (the office Labour Group for abandoning its development next to Toøer principles. This follows the Bridge). council's decision in principle to&#13;
Johnson met the RFAC recent- negotiate With St Martins over Iy and according to commission the sale of a largcchunk orthesite deputy secretary, Richard Cole- to the developer. Southwark man, "quite happily came up with apparently wants more money&#13;
tno amendments". than St Martins has offered.&#13;
Lethargy complaint&#13;
A NATIONAL surveyclaims80 per cent of office workers believe their place of work causes symptoms of ill-health.&#13;
It reports that air-conditioncd buildings have the highest rates of sickness and that the most common symptom is tcth• argy.&#13;
The commission is not prepared to say at this stage hoys much the height of the scheme is going tobe reduced. as it looking at his revisions in detail next month.&#13;
Apparently Johnson is also prepared to try and introduce • •a human scale" into the scheme after the REAC told him that it disliked the way he had disguised storeys as one.&#13;
Ibe 1.1)DC has agreed not to determine St Martins Property Corporation's planning application until the roised scheme&#13;
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Haringey&#13;
Journal, suggests that the •scol• lcctivc management • • introduced at the BDS two years ago has turned "sour".&#13;
The damning report catalogues a series of ' •controversial incidents". including sackings and disciplinary actions.against rofcssional staff within the IDS. which have reportedly resulted from zealous application of the equal opportunity policy. An unnamed senior architect is quoted in thc newspaper as saying "politics comes before professionalism". journal also clatms that "a new ethnic weighting system More cash for homes says report&#13;
A SIMPLIFIED home improvcmcnt grant system targeted at those most in need should b introduced in Wales. accordin to a report from the Cornmtttcon Welsh Affairs.&#13;
The condtnon and repair privately-owned housing sa urgent action is needed in Walt where housing conditions worse by all available inditors. than in England.&#13;
Poor conditions are con trated in the private sect much of which dates back to pre- 1919 period.&#13;
About 12 per cent ofprivatei. owned housing is unfit fo human habitation and 10 pen cent lacks at least one bmsic amenity. In the private rented sector 24 per cent of all privately rented homes are unfit. says the report.&#13;
Birmingham hotel boost&#13;
ANOTHER international hotel chain has been given planmng consent for a multi-storey cotnplex In the centrc of Btrrn• ingham.&#13;
Percy Thomas Partnership have designed an eight-storey. ISO-bed hotel for thc French chain, Novotcl.&#13;
The new building Will face the controversial. E 32 million Hvatt Hotel which was finally given consent in February.&#13;
Novoters E3.S million development will have a six-storey rectangular tower standing on plinth and includes basement car parking. restaurants and three hanqucting sultes.&#13;
Work is due to start in July uith completion set for thc end of 1988.&#13;
Student wins gas prize&#13;
NICHOLAS Williams of the Birmingham school of architecture. has won first prize in the new British Gas student archltects energy competition.&#13;
A winner is nominated from each of the 36 RIBA-recogmsed architecture schools. Birmingham was the first to announce its winner.&#13;
By BD reporter &#13;
makes it impossible for white British men to be shortlisted for jobs in the Building Design Service".&#13;
The accusations against the council have been supported by an anonymous correspondant to BD. who claims to work tn the BDS. He or she writes "better paid positions normally reserved for effort and professional expertise arc now the rewards of left-wing activists".&#13;
A council spokeswoman denicd that thc application of the council's equal opportunities policy was in any way extreme.&#13;
"Our policy of positive discri-&#13;
mination means that of two people equally well qualified the candidate from the minority group Will get the job." But. she continued. "we would not employ someone who was not qualitied to do the job. unless we could organise a training programme."&#13;
Asked whether it was true that white men do not get shortlisted for Jobs. the spokeswoman said: "We have appointed several such candidates in the last few months". &#13;
4 BUILDING DESIGN. May 22, 1987&#13;
 &#13;
 &#13;
 Cabaret at Racial &#13;
the Rialto&#13;
'take over &#13;
Chassay right have  planning consent for a scheme to was the circle the cabaret /restaurant. professionals&#13;
restore and con»ett the Rialto cinema on Co•entty Street This "ill he done in sus•b a so to retain the into an uptuatkct cabaret night spot. decoratisa• reliefs along the front of the circle balustrade.&#13;
Grand  Productions' plans to convert the Rinlto— the pension fund  the Rialto. managed of I.ondo.n's earliest purposc•uilt cinemas — into a to persuade Westminster City Council to  a chance of ALLEGATIONS of an "0b. restaurant and cabaret on the first floor "ith a restaurant because it could not sell the property as a cinema.&#13;
and bar on the ground floor. But according to Stefanie Of Hurrell Eok•v session with racial issues" Designed by Ilorace Gilbert in 1913. the 600-seat Associates, who triedto buy the Rialtofrom ESS it have been levelled at Ilarincinema's main feature is itselegantovalaoditorium. cinema on a prc•ious occasion, ESS was as\ing too much gey council's Building Design to be restored. (Letters&#13;
 Wright,  designed the Groucho club in John Robots Architects are project managers — not the Service by a local paper.&#13;
Soho. "ill put in a  floor in the auditorium to make Bhat designers of scheme as reported on May 8. The report. in the Haringey drainage&#13;
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  THE Theatres Trust has wel- protection promoted by the&#13;
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 installations, or Order which should safeguard consequent requirement in the&#13;
 for use in existing the future of manv theatres. ' 'It •s hats in the air," said trust general development order for consultation with the Theatres&#13;
 chambers as a director John Earl. • • We •re Trust before granting planning&#13;
 free standing unit. delighted that our energetic representations and those of permission on land which in.&#13;
cludes a theatre".&#13;
 Single or dual pump other people have had the Earl is convinced that DOE&#13;
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 and pipework can be The DOE circular issued earlier this month creates an reversed the intention to include theatres in the assembly and&#13;
the installed to suit stations with a separately constructed assembly and leisure class. but takes theatres out of it, leisure class.&#13;
With theatres included, irre•&#13;
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                  <text>Many NAM members were engaged in the field of architectural education, either as staff or students, and&#13;
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                <text>ARCUK snubs RIBA over Council</text>
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                <text>4 BUILDING DESIGN. April 3. 1987&#13;
 &#13;
 &#13;
Drury Lane warehouse gets the go-ahead&#13;
PLANNING consent has been 39. Sq. m of residential accompt for the EPR Partnerships mediation complete with redevelopment scheme for a at num.&#13;
warehouse/office building at Meanwhile. an EPR scheme 54-57 Drury Lane, London a residential redevelopment&#13;
WC2. at 44-46 Drury Lane has been but work will not he abstract submitted to Westminster City until vacant possession is ob.• Council for approval. EPR's trained in 1990. clients, the Limco Groups arc JR P Investments Will develop proposing 17 flats for the mixed scheme. which Will conservation arca Site. which is comprise 3.900sq m of offices. currently occupied by a vacant 20fisq m of studio space and social club budding. Biffen hopes &#13;
Victoria Tower &#13;
TIIE Palace of Victoria Toner may not be refurbished along with the rest of the Parliamentary buildings,&#13;
In response to Parliamentary question from Harry Greenuay MP. the Rt non John Bitren. leader of the 'louse of Commons, said "I hope that in due course the Victoria 'Isomer can be. restored".&#13;
A PSA spokesman told BI) that&#13;
• 'it is likely the tower will be for a fresh plan&#13;
restored but it will be several years before work starts. as funds have to be allocated before planning and consultation can begin."&#13;
Architect SIP Sydney Chap• man asked whether there were any plans to improve some of the palace's internal courtyards "which are very untidy and a disgrace to the splendid architectural heritage that has been passed on to us". Docklands young at Easter&#13;
IIS year's RIBA workshops tor young people will be held during the Easter break,&#13;
Qualified architects will accompany 14-17 year olds on a study trip to London's Docklands on April 23 while on April groups of8-13 year olds will take part In the Makerspace project (designing a lifesize space for a person. mammal or object).&#13;
For the Docklands trip the teenagers will be asked to workshop for&#13;
prepare a brief and drawings for a new Docklands building.&#13;
 &#13;
right be lacking and various design criteria.&#13;
Places at the workshops are limited and applications should&#13;
be made to the RIBA as soon as possible. It costs €2 per head.&#13;
Practising architects or students who would like to lead groups should contact Sheena Parsons at the RIBA,&#13;
Building contracts warning&#13;
WARNING about using the appropriate form of contract been Issued by two national building bodies.&#13;
'l hey claim using the wrong contract leads to Increased costs a less satisfactory building process.&#13;
110th the Joint Contracts&#13;
Tribunat for the Standard Form&#13;
Building Contract OCT) and&#13;
National Joint Consulta-&#13;
Committee for Building (NJCC) are urging clients and professional advisers to study the JCT practice note 20, two bodies also warn that outdated 1963 standard vs still being used in some cases. This has been superseded JCI'S(). which was amended January to require works to insured on an all risks basis,&#13;
The advantages of JCT 80 explained in practice note 21. Practice notes 20 (€2.50) and practice 21 (f t. 3()) are available RIBA Publications. FinsMission. Moreland Street. London ECI. Arcuk &#13;
ARC UK has delivered a massive public snub to the RIBA by turning down institute nomination Gordon Graham for the post of council Vice-chairman.&#13;
Members voted by 24 votes to 21 to appoint Ken Taylor of the Abbey Hanson Rowe Partnership. Unattached Arcuk members refused to field a candidate as they feared it might split the Arcuk vote and let Graham in.&#13;
This is the first time in 55 years the RIBA nomination has not been elected despite the RIBA snubs RIBA over council&#13;
 Arcuk should keep some inde- education but the RIBA is battle loomed and nominated role under the EEC directive.&#13;
pence and not be overwhelmed having none of it. loyal RIBA establishment fig- But both members are now on by the influence of the RIBA. President lorry Rolland has rues and seasoned campaigners Arcuk's Board of Education. "Arcuk will no longer be a said Arcuk's increasing interest for Arcuk Council this year. nominated by Portsmouth and rubber stamp," he said. in educational matters was "not He dropped council chairman Huddersfield schools. Pundits main area of contention in the best interests of archi- Bob Adams and education arc predicting that the board is between the two bodies is edu- tecture. the public, or future chairman Denys Hinton from where the education battle will cation. Arcuk has said It wants a student tntakc••. council after they refused to be fought and that it will be a greater say in architectural Rolland knew a difficult overturn Arcuk's strengthened hard fight for the RIRA.&#13;
   &#13;
 By Alan Thompson  &#13;
 appointing 42 of the6.Srncmbers sitting on Arcuk Council.&#13;
Taylor poured oil on the RIBA Arcuk troubled waters and called for a "harmomsation of interests and not a fragmentation"&#13;
Unattached member Norman Arnold told B": *'Taylor •s appointment should bring opencss and umty to the education debate". Arnold is keen that &#13;
     &#13;
   &#13;
              &#13;
         &#13;
            &#13;
      &#13;
Scottish multi-millionaire Murray this week unveiled an ESO million reconstruction scheme for Edinburgh's historic Port Hamilton district.&#13;
The mixed commercial and residential dcsclooment on a 2.Sha site jtzst half a from Prances Street will be the largest privately funded scheme since war. It is the most ambitious planner launched by MI M. the property arm of Murray International Loadings&#13;
MI.M's consultant architect Gareth Hutchison said the project based on original canal-basin buildings demolished SO years ago and at}deed that they already applied roar planning permission.&#13;
scheme provides for a waterfront development in the highly successful popular style or London's St Katharine's Dock." he said.&#13;
Plans for the site include 34.000sq m offices; 10.000sq m private bousing• m retail space complete smith a glazed mall. and 6.500sq m hotel accommodation with a m function suite. "'Il also beundcrgrouncl parking OSO cars.&#13;
Murray said the mixed developments soot only complemented commercial viability. but also helped to ensure activity all day and all year round&amp;'.&#13;
r the scheme is given the go-ahead by city and regional planners work should on site this year "its completion set 1990. Up to 1.200 jobs 9ilI be created. &#13;
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  &#13;
the &#13;
A &#13;
has &#13;
and &#13;
of the live their &#13;
the form &#13;
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Enter ON EXPRESS&#13;
ENQUIRY CARO&#13;
&#13;
from bury &#13;
mile tbc &#13;
the had &#13;
and &#13;
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start &#13;
C'&#13;
A   &#13;
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exo tec&#13;
BUILDING DESIGN. April 3. 1987 3&#13;
News&#13;
Construction Adopt a homeless Scottish&#13;
industry pulls family, says Hackney&#13;
ROD 'lacuney has urged archi- bad or non-existent housing". teetS to adopt homeless families The latest figures from Shelter council cuts jobs&#13;
 to sol•c Britain's housing prob• say there are at least 100.000 &#13;
 lern. homeless people in Britain, STRATHCLYDE Regional&#13;
Council's architectures depart-&#13;
  Speaking at the Family Forum Hackney said: "If every RIBA mcnt. the biggest in the country,&#13;
 conference as part or National member adopts a homeless family has axed 177 jobs ina restructure&#13;
together for 'lousing Week. Hackney re- and finds a solution to their vealed his plan to put architects housing problem, the problem of masterminded by department director Jack McDougall.&#13;
 and the RIBA at the forefront of homelessness in Britain could be With the agreement of Nalgo&#13;
 the fight against homelessness. ended Hithin five years. and his staff. McDougall has so&#13;
 "Where architects see a prob. "Architects are uniquely lem they should not wait to be placed in the housing market to far managed to reduce his&#13;
computer link asked for help. They have a duty see opportunities whether they be department by 140 people over the last year.&#13;
 to initiate action. Who else is building a self-aid scheme or He has also reorganised the&#13;
 there who knows more about directing a temporarily housed department to give It a greater&#13;
A COMPUTERISED infor- IS days are possible — but so far environmental and housing prob- family to a more permanent and lems other than the very victirnsof better home." "community architecture" slant. Instead of running it through&#13;
mation exchange to make the construction industry more the only savings achieved have been marginally tn excess of two New South Bank move three main groups. there are now six,&#13;
efficient is planned by major days.   The cuts have been made to&#13;
product manufacturers, build- Edicon points out that many LAMBETH council was de.  Hall — part of his more ambi- try and prevent a S2.S million&#13;
ing contractors and public individual organisattons in the industry have  in ciding this week 9hetlter to allow the  tious scheme to glaze over the shortfall between the depart-&#13;
bodies, Invested heavily computer systems for internal second phase of 'I'erry Ear. rel's scheme to brighten up  space between the buildings to allow room for new foyers. cafes. ment•s earnings and what it costs to run. McDougall told BD&#13;
Trafalgar House. IBM. Red- communications. but the necdis London's South Bank. shops and restaurants. his cuts would save €3 million.&#13;
land. John Laing. Boulton &amp; for a system of communica- Farrell wants to demolish the  Farrell has been re-elected Job cuts have been achieved&#13;
Paul, Redland. the Property tion between the different high-level walkway in front of the  president of the Urban Design through early retirement and&#13;
Services Agency and others have launched a company to promote the concept.&#13;
Edicon — electronic data exchange in the construction industry — will be invitingothet members of the construction industry to join the company.&#13;
Other industries such as elements of the industry. south side of the Royal Festival  Group for a further two years. holding vacancies.&#13;
retailing. pharamceuticals, automotive. and more recently Probabtvthe best  &#13;
shipping arc using electronic data&#13;
By Lee Mallett&#13;
the the pr incipie is well-established in Atnerica.&#13;
"Devclopment Of an EDI system would not only bc feasible, but is essential for thc future health of the industry". Edicon clams.&#13;
A launch meeting will be held soon to invite membership and to receive nominations for executive posts in the orgamsation.&#13;
Three main areas of the industry that EDI would improve are financtal management, inventory control and customer service, according to Edicon.&#13;
If EDI systems were adopted internationally savings of up to €10 billion for businesses could be made. says the company. Where EDI has been used in Bntain, in the invoicing and payments cycle. savings of up to&#13;
Joining the board&#13;
ARCHITECT lets councillor Jonathan Mathews has been appointed to the London Docklands De. velopment Corporation board.&#13;
Mathews. a tutor at the house floor in the  &#13;
Architectural Association. is a founder member of the Social Democratic Party and lives highly insulated domestic flooring system ever.&#13;
north of the Isle of Dogs on  Jetfloor Plus is the only flooring The system gives unrivalled With a •tr value in the order of&#13;
Tower Hamlets' Docklands. He   system to have been designed advantages to the architect for 0.2 W/m 20 C it will easily meet the&#13;
is the second architect to  specifically for housew It has been design, to the builder for ease of proposed new building tv•gulations&#13;
be appointed to the board alongs;dc Sir Andrew Derby-  successfully used in thousands of  construction. to the homeowner for for energy conservation.&#13;
shire.  homes throughout the country. as economy and that's why more and&#13;
Mathews says his key concern  well as in many of the most highly  mote people are beginning to realise Write now for details and literature.&#13;
to secure jobs for local people. regarded house designs for the future that every home should have one.&#13;
 &#13;
In brief Wycombe shortlist&#13;
WYCOME council has selected nine practices from more than 70 applications to go forward tn an architectural competition for&#13;
a new arts centre,&#13;
They are Aldington Craig &amp; Collingc•. Derek Walker Asso• ciates; Eldred Evans &amp; David Shalcv: Howell, Killick. Partridge &amp; Amis. McCormack Jamieson &amp; Pritchard; Ncylan &amp; tJnglcss•. Paul Makcrow•. Roderick Ham &amp; Partners; and Trevor Dannatt Partners. The centre. which will include a 400.seat theatre, hall and multi•storcy car park, will be developed on a conservation infill site in central High Wycomc.&#13;
Inplan win&#13;
FIRST-YEAR architecture student at Bath University Julian Brown has won the 1987 Inplan Award Trophy and a cash prize of €2,000.&#13;
Sponsored by BRUFMA. the British Rigid Urethane Foam Manufacturers' Association, and Building Design. the award is intended to promote energy conscrrvation planning in buildingSecond prize of El ,000 was won by Chris Gregory of Not. tingharn University and other awards went to Sinclair Thomson, Martin Hughes, Stephen Meeney and Susan Cornish.&#13;
Flat grant&#13;
COVENTRY's Wood End Estate is to have a E92S.000 urban development grant as part of a E-S million improvement package.&#13;
Developer Bellways Urban Renewal will replace 76 flats and maisonettes with 95 houses designed by Geden ofCoventry. Island talks&#13;
THE scheme for the Jacobs Island Company has not been refused planning permission by the London Docklands Development Corporation as stated in our report last week.&#13;
Discussions are taking place over some of the design details. We apologise for any embarrassment caused. Bath show&#13;
BATH Arts Association will show a film on Frank Lloyd Wright at the Huntingdon Centre in Bath on April 15. Details: (0225) 69874.&#13;
Sugden goes&#13;
DEREK Sugden, one of the founder engineering partners of Arup Associates. retired from the practice at the end of last month. He intends to concentrate more in the field of acoustics and will remain a consultant to Arup Acoustics.&#13;
 &#13;
Enter 3 ON ENQUIRY EXPRESSCARD&#13;
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                  <text>Many NAM members were engaged in the field of architectural education, either as staff or students, and&#13;
pursued new ideas for course content and pedagogy, reassessing existing course structures and priorities in&#13;
conventional architectural training. The concern to focus on socially necessary buildings and to find new and meaningful&#13;
ways of engaging with building users and the wider community- both central NAM themes - illuminated much of the discussion.</text>
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                <text>Chaos hits RIBA dispute with ARCUK'</text>
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                <text>No 828 -  ..vgvopaper lor me design team&#13;
Privy Council drawn into controversy&#13;
AN astonishing RIBA Denys Hinton told BD that the resubmit its candidates, but it &#13;
bungle in its battle with agm scheduled •for Wednesday had been cancelled until should also go through the usual canvassing procedures before its &#13;
the Architects Registra- Monday. March 30 on the list is drawn up. and this is &#13;
tion Council (Arcuk) has advice of the Privy Council. clearly impossible in a week." &#13;
led to the Privy Council would allow the RIRA&#13;
Council meeting next Wednes- list has been put at risk by an attempt at "conciliation" &#13;
being called in to adjudi- day to endorse its candidates from the Kingston school's &#13;
cate. and is sure to fuel the row which deputy head, Peter Jacob. who is &#13;
 erupted when the institute member of the RIBA Council &#13;
On its advice. the Arcuk announced them in February. and Arcuk's education com- &#13;
annual general meeting was 42 nominations to the 65- mittee. &#13;
postponed this week because strong body omitted many has tabled a motion for &#13;
the RIBA Council had not  next week's RIBA Council &#13;
endorsed the institute's list of nominees for Arcuk By John Wood meeting condemning the omission of Hinton and Adams from &#13;
Council. existing members including the list. and calling for concilia• tion between the two bodies. &#13;
•that lisé is in jeopardy — a motion opposing it has been Hinton and Bob Adams. chair. men of the council. Jacob. who has served on &#13;
tabled for the RIBA Council institute claimed that the Arcuk's education board for &#13;
meeting next week. new blood on the council would several years. has been dropped &#13;
Arcuk's education chairman strengthen its presence. but from the institute's nominations for that body without a word of &#13;
How the others saw it asa cynical attempt to rein in Arcuk after itopposed explanation.&#13;
The RIBA has put forward 16 &#13;
 the institute's education policy. Commenting on the cancella- practitioners. in response. it &#13;
argument lion. Arcuk Council member Norman Arnold (who is not an claims, to extra places being created on the board for heads of &#13;
 RIBA member) complained schools. &#13;
started that he had only been given one day's notice of a meeting that is usually arranged one year in PSA jobs Eating out&#13;
A TOP-LEVEL meeting be- advance. BRYAN Jefferson, director- PLANS to turn a disused&#13;
tween the RIBA and Arcuk led He said that with such short general of design services at the London church into an Ameri-&#13;
to the current cold war, Arcuk notice some council members PSA. is to stay in his job until can-style restaurant have been&#13;
Council was told on Wednes- would be unavailable for the June 1989 at the DoE's request. rejected on appeal. Westminster&#13;
day by chairman Robert Adams. rearranged meeting and there But Kenneth Jeavons, 47, will council. supported by Save,&#13;
ile said that at a meeting on could be pressure for a further succeed Fred Levy as director of opposed development of St&#13;
February 3 president Larry delay. architectural services on April I. Marks, North Audley Street,&#13;
Rolland and vice-president On the reason for the cancel- Levy is retiring. Jeavons joined because of its fine Victorian&#13;
Peter Melvin asked Adams and lation he commented: "The the DOE Property Services interior. The inspectorcalled for&#13;
Denys Hinton to overturn Arc uk's strengthened role under the EEC directive. RIBA should be allowed to Agency in 1970. "more appropriate uses"&#13;
This would increase Arcuk's for architectural Modest Budget boost&#13;
responsibility education at the expense of the RIBA. Hinton and Adams refused to comply.&#13;
They were Informed that they would not be nominated for Arcuk Council. At a later meeting they were told the RIBA would reverse all education decisions made by Arcuk in the last year.&#13;
Arcuk Council member John Allan said this appeared to constitute a pnma tacic case of "disgraceful conduct" by the RIBA representatives involved. &#13;
CHAOS HITS RIBA DISPUTE wlTH ARCUK&#13;
DDEX&#13;
ROSTRUM 2, &#13;
FRIDAY MARCH 201987&#13;
Fire swept throegb Glasgo•'s Ca d•Oro building last Friday. causing extensive damage to the e interior and destroying mtxb or original irongork. in 1812 by John as a furniture tbe building is un&amp;rcoing IS million comersion to offices and shops by Scott Brownrieg &amp; Turner.&#13;
Along With John Bair&amp;s&#13;
Gardeners Building in J•miea Street. Ca d'Oro. on tbe corner of Unif*l Street and Gordon Street. is the most&#13;
u.histicated exercise in&#13;
c. framed •rchit«tore in Scotland.&#13;
Only tse day before.&#13;
council finally gave to Sir Leslie ih 120 million concert hall the St Andrew's Halls,&#13;
25 years ago,&#13;
 *design  page S&#13;
+13&#13;
"dud/&#13;
 &#13;
THIS year's budget goes only contractors and consultants. VAT — this will only apply on a marginal benefits to the con- "Although there is no specific "cash received basis" for com• struction industry. But cuts in the help for the construction and patties with a turnover ofless than PSBR. loner interest rates and property industries. the modest €250,000. This will improve cash changes in VAT payments will overall stimulus to the economic flow and avoid up-front payment reduce business costs and make environment will bring more of VAT on bad debts.&#13;
56,&#13;
Infill 9, Comment 9, PerspectiVe 10,&#13;
Scorpio 11, SAGs 11. Letters 12-13.&#13;
Features 14-28, New products 38-39, Products in practice 41, Easiebeek 42,&#13;
Dateline 43, Free classified 44, Corbusier considered A weeks later became part of F*'tel extension in Deg on. or shopptng mall tn Long Island. an complex in Nice. pool pavilion in Honolulu,&#13;
out  glaung system  and fully documented iot 21 rwp.w winds and it. oi snow; spanning from to  and&#13;
Fot yout next curves. we insite yoo to  &#13;
Appointments 4S-SS.  Our learning.&#13;
MACHIN DESIGNS u,qrry-l) &#13;
  Ransotne•s Patkgate Road, Loadoe SWI t 01 223 040 11&#13;
investment in construction more business to the industry and to its Business expansion schemes — I. profitable, according to the customers." investment made in these in the RIRA. Corporation tax — basic rates first six months of the year can A team of financial experts and for businesses with less than now be offset against the previous architects headed by Max Hutch• EIOO.OOO profit each year have year's tax. 'Illis bill make more inson said: "It's a small business been reduced from 29 to 27 per investment capital available for On September 3 1986 we be-or our budget benefiting small sub- cent. continued pago 3 21 ,000th bat.&#13;
pages 14-21&#13;
 &#13;
Enter 1 ON ENOUIRY EXPRESSCARO&#13;
2 BUILDING DESIGN. March 20, 1987&#13;
 &#13;
FRIENDLY greetings were be anything as simple as a single Thom Gorst on David Wild at the RIBA. hero was Mies van der Rohe. the Lenin tribune etc) onto the&#13;
shouted across the packed reasoned argument. or an epi-  Three years at the AA were grid. The diarist who bought the&#13;
foyer. David Wild's reputa- sode by episode history. It was part dialectic, part life story,  not dwelt upon. and he wassoon thing then laid a personal life on&#13;
tion has spread well. There were students and ex-students part slide-show and part jazz/ blues session. It was. by and call of back in the States again. Suddenly the auditorium was dren- top of the lot, By now the slides were completely out of order.&#13;
"This  free form&#13;
and small heros. and perhaps two big ones. For all ot large,a treat to be part of.  ched With blues sineng. . . "I'm ring to Chtcayy. Ibis is what is  — a real challenge." The audience loved&#13;
one or them on Tuesday evening, He left his early days until a bit later on. First of all he wantedto  •m gonna do • ...the photographs from the proJcctors sped it.&#13;
And so finally to the archi-&#13;
the RIBA was the place to be. The rear partition slid out of clear the air about LeCorbusier. possibly in case anyone in the audience had  the Wild along. They were disparate street scenes from Chicago's tecture. or at least to the house that Wild built for himself in&#13;
sight as the main lecture hall was been persuaded by  South Side. The slides started to north London over a period of&#13;
expanded to its full capacity. Roddy Gradidge the previous  show Wild's fascination With the four years. "Isn•t it better todo&#13;
Ted Cullinan mounted the week. To Corb,archltccturcwas  juxtaposition of opposites. something slowly and carefully&#13;
the play of masses broughtwithin a geometrical grid. A together by light. To a famousdown-and-out and a bus.ness London practitioner of theexecutive in front of a Mies modern style, though. thefacade. Wildispreoccupiedwith definitive form of moderncollage, but in Amertca he architecture was thecornmercialthinks you don't have to make block. How many speculativecollages — you find them again office buildings did Le Corbusierand again. Another short burst do? Wild couldn't remember theof music and more images from&#13;
number. Perhaps there was&#13;
 — making spaces. some truth in James Dunnett•sthe South Side.&#13;
rostrum. "I first met David Wild suggestion that the RoutemasterAt this point the slides went if you have time? Who says time at the end of the (David bus was nearly the best piece ofout of synch, It was almost ts money! I don't." does a thumbs up to a friend in modern architecture in London.bound to happen. The two To him. there is absolutely the audience) when we all thought And now he began. "I wascarousels took turns to project nothing satisfying as making buildings should be built by the tx»rn by the seaside. At the agc ofonto the screen. so that one slide things. It may bc the first design people and tor the people." But three I was taken to New Yorkfaded in while the previous one model for his house. it may be then there wasa recession which on the Queen Mary. I was hungfaded out. It took two assistants the ground plan With regulating led us to monetarism, and from the edge Of the Empireat the projection table tooversce lines laid studiously upon it tn conservatism, and carelessness. State Building. So I'm involvedthings. Sadly. what had been red ink. It may bc the working when fatalism took over from With the metropolis."well rehearsed was gotng well drawings ("if you look hard you optumtsm. Early influences seemed towrong. "Never mind. They can see the dimensions") or it This was to be an optimistic have been the Boys Fun Book andchanged the slides round as a may be the lovingly constructed evening — so optimistic that similar publications that en-joke in my first public lecture. I shuttering for the circular Wild's first words on rising to couraged him to make things.learned all about aranoia and columns.&#13;
the rostrum were "This is going He was particularly impresseddefensible space t at evening." He went on to show other to be a serious talk. . .so please with instructions for a "PocketHe poured a large glass ofthe red projects, including a plan for a feel free to burst out laughing". Receiver for Sports Fans".liquid from the green bottle. house next door to hrs own. that Very seriously, he opened a Better than the kits you get theseComing back to England he is inspred by Adolf Loos(whois charming little attache case and days.tried to put the radicalrsation he now more interesting to Wild removed a huge and varied Back in Britain he went topicked up in the States to some than Mies).&#13;
selection of books. The case grammar school and failed hiseffect. He produced the Big Red He finished with a kaleido• must have been bottomless. A-levels badly. He worked on aDiary for Pluto Press that many scope of slides With musical especially as the last item to building site, but then went towill remember fondly. but few backing that seemed tobnngthe emerge was a corked green art college to study architecturewill know was conceived as lecture right back to its begtnbottle with what turnedout tobe (you only needed O•levels inanother collage. The day by day ning. Every book had been a red liquid inside. those days), He spent five days alayout was a grid. He latd quoted from. and the bottle was  evening wasn't going to week drawing things. His first Child of the metropolis in his London home. Photos: Georr Beeckrnan. historical images (drawings of getting low.&#13;
Paul Finch on the European shopping centre conference.&#13;
 MONTE Carlo  an irresis- even prayer. In Short become a&#13;
wnpowrnv« 1.000 delegates and companions Shop supermarkets.&#13;
 tible attraction for more than way of life rather than giant-sized&#13;
 to this year's European Council Centres in the US. delegates,&#13;
 Of Shopping Centres conference. heard, had already been designed&#13;
 About half the delegates were purely on the basis of this type of&#13;
 British, including representatives market research. Other informa-&#13;
 of nearly SO firms of architects tion from across the Atlantic was&#13;
 and designers. by far the largest talk less cheerful: centre owners plan&#13;
 single national group. Crighton to take part later this year in a&#13;
 and Fitch had hired yachts (the national campaign to persuade&#13;
 former unfortunately becoming different ways. and that centres adolescents tostay off drugs — 10&#13;
 entangled  the Niarchos probably needed to be places for per cent arc "chemically depen-&#13;
 usingPOlNT ASTERmeans... mega-yacht on an unuiseattempt meeting and spending time "ith dent"; neøs another chilline piece of&#13;
 to leave the harbour); what shopping attached — "attractive gas that 1.5 million people&#13;
 recession we wondered. as cham- places "here people might buy". *ere fingerprinted in US shop-&#13;
 paene and fruits de mer arroed in ne centres of the 1990s uould ping centres last year as part of a&#13;
 abundance. need a local identity. be activity- security and child protection&#13;
In the UK. &#13;
 up to 50% time saving centre doelopers heard. can shoppingsee only based. ties for provide sports, increased recreation facili•and of scheme. shopping•Not quite the human face&#13;
boom times round the corner:&#13;
 Rrfect results with unskilled schemes under construction or&#13;
with planning permission total 62&#13;
million square feet. Of the 600-&#13;
 Only one tm/ and accessories Odd have centres yet to built be since refurbished 1965.500or&#13;
 produces four major remodelled, noted Harold Couch THE SPIRAL STAIRCASE SPECIALISTS&#13;
 joint forms of Parker.property consultants Ilillier&#13;
Good rent growth and de-&#13;
 Already used and specified by mand bright from prospects. retailers though made therefor&#13;
 most leading contractors and  specialists. were some clouds — he did not&#13;
 Avat7able from most builders merchants belieu• more than one in three&#13;
proposed out-of-town centres and leading DIX. stockists. uould take place.&#13;
The theme of the conference&#13;
 If they are out of stock or you have any trouble finding it — was the "human face of shop.&#13;
ping", and demographic stati•&#13;
 ring Terry Huxley on 0443-690954. We are here to help. stics came in thick and rast —&#13;
rather less attention "as paid to&#13;
the "inhuman face" of buying&#13;
 All from a television screen. Either&#13;
way, what developers and archi•&#13;
 TO,99 ...POINT tects need to consider is social OOVESTIC  ST.VR COMMERCIAL/FIRE ESCAPE&#13;
 trends. 1800&#13;
 Market researchers sug- The  range of steel  staircases is the ftst have t4'en&#13;
 gested that the significant Euro- spec'%cajty created to  ocmply •mth the new Budog Regulators&#13;
pean trends gere the increase of&#13;
(1985)&#13;
"non-conventional" families as&#13;
 shoppers, more older couples Stai•cases are av,iiåbk' in ever.' category as defined by BS 5395&#13;
 EXCALIBUR HAND TOOLS LTD whose children had left home (the Part 2  INDUSTRIAL.&#13;
 "emancipated Old") and the PUBLIC  FIRE ESCAPE PURPOSES,&#13;
 Freepost, unit 6, Merthyr Industrial Park. increasing people living likelihood on their of own.old Al' FCC  cocrpet.rj•ve ate suitable pree multpstcce•v'åSt  to ow sales  cc cav at our&#13;
 Rntrebach, Merthyr Tydfil, Mid Glamorgan. Shoppers were not class-related centra' London srat•case showroom&#13;
 CF48 4BR. Tel: 0443 690954. groups "multi-dimensional but people who models"fitted Sa.és, AJbon Des. ot Camerase ltd.&#13;
 each with their assn ••socio style". street. lcndcr,WC2HBOJ  1 IS fines)&#13;
WI'at this meant fordevelopers&#13;
was the recognition that social&#13;
groups had to be catered for in&#13;
Enter 2 ON ENQUIRY EXPRESSCARO Enter 3 ON ENQUIRY EXPRESSCARO&#13;
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                  <text>Many NAM members were engaged in the field of architectural education, either as staff or students, and&#13;
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                <text>BUILDING DESIGN. February 27. 1987 11&#13;
Statistics&#13;
 SORRY yo  VOUR CIASS THERES A MINISTRY THE 000  IS&#13;
 &#13;
Scorpio HEADMISTRESS. Bur  AN  , INSPECTOR IN YOUR OFFICE HE SAYS HES FPCM THE&#13;
EWIRONMENT&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
Nor EDUCATION&#13;
AND SC'ENCk&#13;
Bryan acnes&#13;
 &#13;
Regrouping for&#13;
Arcuk round two&#13;
WILL the education lobby on Arcuk take the RIBA's latest move to crush them lying down? Not very likely. since the registration council's constitution does allow for elements other than glove puppets from Portland Place to have a voice.&#13;
HEADMISTRESS  CALCEO Aßour THE TEMPORARY' CLASSROOM&#13;
WHICH YOV ÄÆ HAD IN YOUR&#13;
PLAYGßOUND SINCE 1953&#13;
..THEYOE FINALLY ER..!FRAD NOT, Its JUST BEEN&#13;
GOT AROUND ro BUT 1 GPAOE 2 REPLACING IT ! YOU'D LIKE TO LISTED STATVS KNOW..&#13;
 &#13;
The story so far: Arcuk council is dominated by RIBA nominees. whtch for years has meant that the two orgamsations have had more or less the same policies. Certain anomalies in Arcuk's make-up. for example the fact that many schools were without representatives on the board of education, were gradually ironed out.&#13;
Trouble arose when Arcuk. entirely against traditional practice. dared to take a different line over school closures to its erstwhile master. It then decided it should have an education officer and should have more of a say on school visiting boards, thus emphasising the statutory responsibillty it carries for architectural education — something it has always devolved to the institute.&#13;
All this was too much for the Portland Placemen, who decided that poor old Professor Denys Hinton and Bob Adams should be sacrificial lambs. and who were thus not nominated for the new council, But Will this be the end of the story? After all. both men could bcnominated to the architectural education board by schools themselves. And under the terms ofa "gentlemen•s agreement" between the RIBA and the Unattached Architects. netthet side challenges nominations that each makes to the council. It is thus possible that Hinton and Adams could be invited by the unattached to stay on council.&#13;
The curiosity in alt this is that the RIBA. having supported the closure of two schools. is now saying that they should be kept open to teach what amounts to community architecture. Having adopted Arcuk's clothes. the RIBA has decided to freeze out those Who have dared to question its infallibility. Three's a crowd . . .&#13;
THE Cotb exhibition opening at the Hayward next week reminds me of the night in 1953 when the great maneame overto London to recetve his Royal Gold Medal at the RIBA. Noless than three of his most ardent lady architect admirers were to be seen vying for his attention at the party after. They had reasoned that a night with the master of the modern movement was as close as it was possible to get to an earthly paradise. Discretion prevents me from saying which lady won the contest. However. I confi• dently predict that all three Will be at the private view of the exhibition this Sunday. Scene and heard&#13;
THE picture of ex-BD editor&#13;
Peter Murray and wife Jane in the Sunday Times colour supple. ment showed their new home — a Norman Shaw villa in West London. Murray thus joins his fellow Blueprint apostle of all that is modern in today's design, Deyan SudJic, by livtng in a listed building! At least Deyan had his styled by Jan Kaplicky.&#13;
TALKING of JR. the BBC were doing their usual bit for architects lie next to nothing)on Tomorrow's World last week. Quite a good explanation of Future System's design for a futunstic tower was marred by the non-mention of designers Kaplicky and David Nixon. This follows in the tradition of coverage of the Hongkong Bank building without mentioning Norman Foster. Why oh why do they behave in this way?&#13;
RUMOURS have been flying across the Atlantic as to Arthur Drexler•s successor as director Of architecture and design at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Stuart Wrede, curator at the museum sincc 1985. and orgamser of the recent Mario Botta exhibition. has been appointed acting director. but informed sources suggest the museum is lookin for a higher profile director. t won't be Alvin Boyarsky, SS-year-old Architectural Association supremo for the past 15 years. He was offered the post but turned it down. Now FT critic Colin Amery is reported to want the job.&#13;
MY sympathies to Architectural Press. who began the promotion of their new monthly giveaway last week. The editor? None other than Richard Willcock. fun•loving ex-AJtechnicaI man. Unfortunately no-one had told them that far from editing the new organ. he was in fact leavtng it to join Jose Manser.as deputy editor of The Architect. and as editor of its interiors supplement.&#13;
GREMLINS scrambled a line in last week's item about people seeking money. The relevant sentence should have said that the British Architectural Library Trust isso short of cash that it can't even afford to pay a solicitor to draw up its trust deed . . . Meanwhile the Building Communities organisers are still seeking cash — the Community Architecture Group has declined to help out. 10 years ago&#13;
AN extra €2,100 million investment in housing and jobs is needed on Merseyside over the next 10 years to prevent the conurbation's inner areas from sinking into urban decline of staggering proportions. This is the message the county council has sent to the secretaries ofstate for environment, industry and employment. Budding Design. February 25.&#13;
1977&#13;
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C EATE&#13;
When you need a door to provide half-hour Supplied pre-primed ready for further&#13;
fire resistance, and your budgets are tight, applications of paint, and&#13;
you don't have to sacrifice ideal for new&#13;
character. Simply specify buildings or where budgets&#13;
the Adam Range from are of a prime&#13;
Longden. consideration, the door gives character at a low&#13;
Manufactured using a cost&#13;
unique pattented process, tested and certificated to And as if that was not&#13;
BS 476: Part 8, the Adam enough, there is a&#13;
door uses a die pressed matching non-fire resistant&#13;
embossed hardboard skin door, which allows&#13;
to give th ppearance of a specifiers to ensure&#13;
traditionql ised and consistant high qual&#13;
fielded lied door, throughout the cont t&#13;
producing lear, sharp lines to th mould details and even  Find out about the Adam Range and&#13;
reproduc the timber grain. put the character back into fire- resis nce.&#13;
Longden Doors of Sheffield of course.&#13;
DOORS&#13;
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Sheffidd SO 8AH&#13;
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ON EXPRESS&#13;
Enter 12 ENQUIRY CARD&#13;
12 BUILDING DESIGN, February 27, 1987&#13;
 &#13;
 &#13;
DESPITE the impression Partners (1983) 2 ACI where Charges brought by the Latent Damage Act&#13;
given by the Latent Damage the limitation period ran from discoverability without any may not be as extreme as they appear,&#13;
Act 1986 as having wreaked terrible changes on the lia- longstop. Further. whether or not there will be many cases says Susan Midha, solicitor with Herbert&#13;
bility of builders and professional advisers, and having where damage actually occurs more than IS years from the date Oppenheimer, Nathan &amp; Vandyk&#13;
enlarged the scope for em- of the negligent act or omission. &#13;
ploycrs and others to sue. the the Act are the wide terms of the longstop clause such actions &#13;
changes madc by largely of degree only, and will prevent being brought altogether. except Degrees of&#13;
one's overall view of the Act where there is deliberate con- &#13;
will, to a certain extent, cealmcnt of the defects. Pirelli have contributed to a false &#13;
depend on whether one is an may &#13;
sense of security in professional &#13;
optimist or a pessimist.&#13;
extra three advisers; surprisingly, perhaps,&#13;
 Lord  in the &#13;
It is the case that an years to bring proceedings has since Fraser's speech case clearly indicated that the damage&#13;
been given by the Act (which law, as he was required to &#13;
came into force on September pronounce it. was not just and &#13;
from the discoverability of should be changed. Parliament years from the completion oft he such a claim. Further. if at the&#13;
damage. But this is tempered by took the hint. job. it will be necessary. after the end of four years of litigation&#13;
the fact that "discoverability" The practical effects of the Act comes into force. to keep, (which takes us up to Il years&#13;
and not "discovery" is the Act are. therefore. matters of maintain and retain them for I S from the date the damage&#13;
starting point for the limitation degree rather than substance years. This is not entirely true. It occurred) the defendant. having&#13;
period, and a IS year longstop and those professional advisers is true that the old limitation lost the action. issued a contri•&#13;
has been put on all negligence who indulged in good practice in period was six years from the bution notice against a third&#13;
actions (other than personal the keeping of records etc before date that the damage occurred, party at the end of the two year&#13;
injury) and not just those the Act will have little to worry but it was always possible for a period allowed under the Civil&#13;
involving latent damage. about after it. plaintiff to issue a writ at the end Liability (Contribution) Act&#13;
From the professional advi- The change in the period of of the six-year period, and serve 1978. he would have a further&#13;
ser's point of view. this must be liability it a year less a day after that. two years!&#13;
an improvement on the state of It has been said that now. Records destroyed religiously This would take us to the 15&#13;
affairs which existed before the instead of keeping records. by the defendants at the end of year period introduced by the&#13;
case of Pirelli General Cable retainin$ evidence and main• the six-year period would then new Act. If the damage did not&#13;
Works Limited v Oscar Faberand taining Insurance cover for six not have been available to meet accrue until after the date of the&#13;
DRIP&#13;
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MON HARDWARE UNITED. INTERNAT"ONAL HOUSE, PEARTREE ROAD. SIAN%VAY. COLCHESTER. coy SIX. ESSEX. TELEPHONE: 0206) 562400 TELEX: 987991&#13;
breach of duty. a further period confirmation can be time.&#13;
can be added to this scenario. consuming and not necessarily&#13;
Under the new Act. the cost-effective.&#13;
longstop period is absolute and Written evidence&#13;
starts from the date ofbreach of It has been suggested that&#13;
duty (ie the negligent act or written statements should be&#13;
omission concerned). It is taken from all personnel in-&#13;
essential to appreciate this if the volved at the end of the job.&#13;
effects of the Act are to be put which could then bc used in&#13;
into their proper perspective. It evidence if a member of staff&#13;
has also been suggested that expires before the limitation&#13;
contribution notices (which, as period does. It is unlikely that&#13;
has been seen. can extend such statements would address&#13;
liability for a further three, four themselves to the matters rele-&#13;
five years) will be barred after vant to the latent damage in&#13;
the IS yearlongstophasexpired. question. They would be shoot-&#13;
In view of this. the Act does ing in the dark,and would havea&#13;
not call for a radical reappraisal by contractors and professional very limited application.&#13;
advisers of their liability, more a Insurance&#13;
methodical look at their prac- It is not yet clear how the&#13;
tices and a hard-headed look at insurers will approach the&#13;
the economics of claims man• question of long-term insurance&#13;
agement. for latent damage. The current&#13;
Keeping records position is that in general, cover IS given on a claims made. not&#13;
It IS always possible, though claims arising. basis. If. there-&#13;
not necessarily practicable or fore. a builder or professional&#13;
economically viable. to keep all adviser is insured when he enters&#13;
records of completed work into the contract with the&#13;
indefinitely. Space. however. is employer. but not when the&#13;
an expensive commodity; mic- problem manifests itself, the&#13;
rofiching is not cheap andcan be plaintiff may find himself withe&#13;
very time-consurmng. Good out any effective remedy.&#13;
practice, therefore. dictates that From the viewpoint of the&#13;
only a selection of material be builder or professional adviser,&#13;
kept when a job is completed. in theory the need to retain&#13;
From the point of view of insurance after a job has been&#13;
litigation. obvious documents completed has now been limited&#13;
to be kept would be: (to just less than 16 years) rather&#13;
client's brief and any other than being limitless. Whether in&#13;
relevant correspondence; practice it is desirable for&#13;
contract documents; professional advisers to keep up&#13;
variation of instructions; insurance for even this long. vs&#13;
site meeting minutes; another matter.&#13;
certificates of practical com- In the recent case of Investors&#13;
ptetion. and dates ofany inspec- in Industry Commercial Proper.&#13;
tions. surveys etc; ties Limited v South Bedford-&#13;
state of the art information; shire County Council. the claim&#13;
progress charts. against the structural engin-&#13;
The approach to the selection eers was dropped because they&#13;
would be to have in documen- were no longer insured. It&#13;
tary form as much as possible of has been suggested that the&#13;
what the client's requirements effect of the Act will be to let&#13;
were, problems during the job, '"fly-by-night" builders and pro-&#13;
and their resolution. fessional advisers off the hook.&#13;
It is possible that the person- While in no way seeking to&#13;
nel involved in thejob will not he suggest that the structural&#13;
available to give oral evidence, engineers involved in that&#13;
so that it will be difficult to prove matter were "fly-by-night". it is&#13;
what is not in the papers. All this salutary to note that thecase was&#13;
information is such as would brought under the old law.&#13;
ordinarily have been kept in any Whether or not premiums will&#13;
event. except perhaps that cone rise when the Act comes into&#13;
cerning the date of any inspec- force will. it is hoped, depend on&#13;
tions, surveys etc which are of the insurcrs• claims experience&#13;
value in calculating longstop — and is at the moment impos-&#13;
periods. Sible to predict. Fears engen-&#13;
It is frequently the case that dered by the Act may. however&#13;
disputes turn on the state of the unfounded. lead to more urgent&#13;
art at the time that the work was consideration of more generally&#13;
done. A presumption will im- applicable building insurance&#13;
mediately be raised in favour of and a consequent reduction in&#13;
the professional adviser who the amount of litigation.&#13;
retains the literature on the state Summary&#13;
of the art with his records The Act will not. therefore.&#13;
provided. of course. that he has followed it! make sweeping changes to the practice which professional&#13;
Recording advisers and builders should&#13;
Where there is a change in the adopt. It does, however. give us&#13;
instructions, by the client or the all an opportunity to reconsider&#13;
adviser, it is obviously desirable our own practices in protecting&#13;
that it is recorded in writing. ourselves from liability. in the&#13;
Many builders automatically light of the knowledge that our&#13;
confirm site instructions in liability is now limited in time. so&#13;
writing and it would be an that we can make informed&#13;
unwise professional adviser who decisions as to the cost-effective-&#13;
failed to check such confirma- ness of those practices.&#13;
tion and raise, in writing, any The wide interest which the&#13;
disagreement as to its contents. Act has evoked may also lead to&#13;
Site minutes are a frequent fundamental changes in the way&#13;
bone of contention. in that they in which responsibility for latent&#13;
often raise problems without defects and latent damage arc&#13;
recording the attempts to re- apportioned, with a consequent&#13;
solve them. Keeping attendance reduction in the aggregate&#13;
notes of all telephone conversa- amount of insurance premiums&#13;
tions should be considered. but paid. and time spent pursuingor&#13;
it has to be said that written defending fruitless claims.&#13;
If you would like further information concerning the products on these pages, please fill in and return the pre-paid reader enquiry carg,F,&#13;
 &#13;
Enter 1 3 ON ENQUIRY EXPRESSCARO&#13;
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                <text>No 823&#13;
RIBA and Arcuk on course for collision&#13;
THE RIBA is heading for a battle with the Architects Registration Council over "ho controls architectural education.&#13;
The institute has strengthened its presence in Arcuk f01109ing its nomination of 42 • important and articulate" members to the 6Sstrong council. They take up their posts in March,&#13;
RIBA president Larry Rolland and president-elect Rod Hackney said this they had been concerned for the past 12 months that Arcuk's increasing interest in educational matters "as "not in the best interests of architecture, the public or future student intake".&#13;
Although the RIBA accepted the closure of the tun archi• tecture schools at Iluddersfield and North-East London Poly. technic. it is keen tostrengthen its negotiating poncrs with the Government folloøing its deci.&#13;
sion to oppose any further closures.&#13;
"The RIBA has been dis. charging its responsibilities ror architectural education since long before the formation of Arcuk and continues to fulfil its obligations in this field," an RIBA statement said.&#13;
The institute sees Arcuk primarily as a registration body and believes that any expansion into other roles can only cause confusion and diffusion of effort. In fact Arcuk has a statutory duty. unlike the RIBA. to regulate architectural education. Rolland and Hackney are expecting difficult times ahead and have nominated seasoned RIBA campaigners along with younger RIBA members to the Arcuk council.&#13;
•ney include Max Hutchinson. Nick Brill, Gordon Graham. Alan Groves, Mike Jeffels, Peter Jones, Harley Sherlock and Professor John Tarn.&#13;
One initiative that Hackney is keen for the RIBA to pursue is a new role for the Huddersfield and North-Fmst London Polytechnic schools.&#13;
The senior vice-president wants both schools reopened under the auspices of Inner City Aid and teaching "enabling" courses (Scorpio January 16).&#13;
The weekly newspaper for the design team FRIDAY FEBRUARY 13 1987&#13;
Insurance giants in the wrong&#13;
PRACTICE&#13;
WINS BIG  &#13;
LIABILITY Ill ILI&#13;
111 &#13;
 Taken from "A project for Frankfurt•• by Peter Conk. this not the conventional closed building hut a series or iterns&#13;
 drawing is among the exhibits incloded in the  Of hidden in the undergrowth. suspended among the trees. in&#13;
LAWSUIT Cook's work at Fischer Fine Art. A groupofprojectsfor the City won joint first place for (be Los Angeles Prize made by in 1986.  small pavilions and special set pieces. place operates like a park or a zoo with glancing and gliding walks and the "hole thing lies above and around a lagoon." The&#13;
 the American Institute of Architects  The picture &#13;
 shows a proposal ror "Qsthafen on the Main. exhibition. at 30 King Street, London SW l.continues until&#13;
  "11ere stands a 'ertical park that contains a February 25.&#13;
A SMALL firm of Exeter architects has success- pounds. as the judge put it. for remedial works.&#13;
Then in June 1982, the Soane staff knew Lutyens&#13;
fully sued two giant&#13;
American insurance com- housing association issued a writ against Acland and Donald approval&#13;
panics who refused to its professional Butler as second defendants. In September 1983. Acland comform for about police tip-off PROPOSALS for Lutyens&#13;
honour  pleted a new proposals  House in the City have finally&#13;
indemnity policy.&#13;
But even though the judge ABS Insurance Brokers which referred to this writ. been granted listed building&#13;
  STAFF at the Sir John Soane  As a result of last Friday's consent by English Heritage.&#13;
awarded costs against the writ was extended by the court. and it was not until Musuem had known about the poticc tip-off of a planned episode. security arrangements Its London Advisory Com. in thc museum arc to be tigh- mittee. together with the Lut- '&#13;
companies. New Hampshire and Home Insurance, the January 1984thatA statement of claim was served, which referred since Christmas, a'sistant carsator Margaret Richardson told tened. Richardson said: "Our yens Trust, were unhappy with whole attitude will sadly have to the interior treatment of the&#13;
 not just to brickwork but to BD this week. change." building by architects William&#13;
By BD Reporters other alleged defects.&#13;
By this time. ABS had swit- A gang of six men attempted to rob the Lincoln's Inn Nimmo &amp; Partners (News Dece Aberdeen dies ember 12).&#13;
estimates that its ched much of its insurance museum last Friday but wal- Developer Greycoat then&#13;
practice legal bill not covered by the business from New Hampshire to Home. because of the form- keded into a police ambush. One DA VID Aberdeen, architect of brought in architects Jnskip &amp; Congress House, the TUC Jenkins to amend the scheme,&#13;
award will be well over five er•s withdrawal from the man was killed during police fire. headquarters in London. has particularly the treatment ofthe&#13;
figures. market. Richardson said the police died aged 73. atrium design.&#13;
In addition the two partners When New Hampshire was had been "incredible in the  &#13;
in the firm. Acland. Thorman &amp; informed of the statement of way &#13;
Dennis Lambeth, have spent&#13;
"hundreds of hours" in pre- claim. it said it could only be liable in respect of brickwork, they had protected the museurn", which had been under constant watch sinceChristmas. DESIGN LAND LONDON&#13;
paring for the High Court action. while Horne repudiated all liability. saying that there had Four of the staff, including &#13;
Ille dispute arose following been non-disclosure of relevant Richardson, were hiding upstairs when the raid took place. &#13;
design work carried out for the information and that the claim She said it was "very scary". &#13;
Devon &amp; Cornwall Housing Association. completed in 1977. had not been made in the period covered by the policy. Staff had been told that the &#13;
nete were subsequently com- Ote practice was thus left with men were dangerous. &#13;
plaints about the brickwork, designed by another firm, the prospect of entering its legal battle With the housing asso- The gang arrived at the museum at the closing time of &#13;
Donald Butler Associates. When a claim was was made, Home's attitude was based on able time of the day," she said. &#13;
it was settled. however. with information supplied by the ABS "If we hadn't known of the raid &#13;
Acland. Thorman making a brokers. which referred to the someone would have opened the &#13;
payment of a few thousand continued back page door in the normal way". &#13;
Hackney supporter's pledge&#13;
 DAVID Davies. chairman of Hackney's proposals". Reports that Alan Groves is PROFESSIONAL&#13;
DY Davies Associates. is the Meanwhile RIBA practice proposing to call a speciat first big name architect to put vice-president Ian Thornton has general meeting to decide the himself forward for RIBA lashed out at the Sunday Times RIBA's nomination for the UIA LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS&#13;
Council this year. over statements attributed to presidency remain unconfirmed Davies, who masterminded him concerning council opposi. this "*tek as BD went to press. A COMPLETE&#13;
the successful flotation of his tion to Hackney. The RIBA said it understood practice on the Unlisted Securi- He has demanded an apology Groves was collecting signaties Market last year told BD: "I in the paper for what he calls tures. but he was unavailable for EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR&#13;
will be supporting many of Rod "pretty scurrilous journalism". comment. Gandhi memorial DESIGN SERVICE&#13;
'litese schools could then be government funded and eater for a general inner city professional course teaching the skills of architecture. management, bus. iness and social commitment. NDEX&#13;
 &#13;
44-46 Scrutton Street&#13;
 &#13;
ROSTRUM 2, News and 48, News in pictures 8, Infill 9. Comment 9, Perspective 10, Scorpio 11, SAGs 11.&#13;
Letters 12-13. Legal WIS. Features&#13;
18-31, New products 32-33, Technical London EC2A 4HH&#13;
literature 34, Free classified 35. Dateline 36. Easicheck 37, Appointments 38-47.&#13;
 pages 18-27 Telephone: 01-377 2777&#13;
ON EXPRESS&#13;
Enter 1 ENQUIRY CARD&#13;
 &#13;
2 BUILDING DESIGN. February 13. 1987&#13;
Rostrum&#13;
 &#13;
IT would be hard to imagine square ("interval spaces" in his&#13;
a greater contrast than that terms) and in bringing them&#13;
betueen last week's RIBA inside the building. Thus the&#13;
lecture, by Jeremy Dixon. plan of the Scharoun school was described by Beigel in terms of a&#13;
and this week's presentation "street" with two "lanes' •&#13;
by Florian Beigel. running off it. onto which the&#13;
In place of Dixon's anti- classroom "houses" faced.&#13;
intellectual approach. Beigel main hall at Great Dixter&#13;
placed himself in a powerful (another favounte of Beigcl•s)&#13;
Intellectual tradition that in- was likewise presented as a&#13;
eluded Giacometti, Camillo "square", in which the "build•&#13;
Sitte, Scharoun. Aalto. Sch.nd. ings" facing onto the "square"&#13;
let, Colin Rowe and (especially) (ie the internal elevations) were&#13;
Walter Segal. treated in the same manner as&#13;
In place of Dixon's very the external elevations of the&#13;
English emphasis on the pic- building.&#13;
tonal, Beigel — standing four- Ille prime appeal of these&#13;
square in the German modernist "interval spaces" for Beige) is&#13;
tradition —emphasisedspace as their gregariousness: they are&#13;
the central fact of architecture. places of meeting, of exchange&#13;
Buildings, said Beigel (quoting (both of goods and ideas). of&#13;
Segal). arc not purely visual: display and visibility. and&#13;
they must also be acceptable to above all of simple sociability, It&#13;
the mind. and this meant is around internal spaces of this&#13;
exercising an appeal through kind, he believes, that we should&#13;
shape and space. orgamse our buildings.&#13;
Finally. in place of Dixon's Such spaces have a number of&#13;
work forthe Royal Opera House characteristics. They must be&#13;
—an "elitist" client if ever there central and preferably at the&#13;
was one — Beigel presented his intersection of circulation&#13;
work for the Half Moon 'liteatre routes; they must allow both for&#13;
in the East End. a self-styled seeing and being seen; they must&#13;
radical client in search of a have a neutral floor plane and&#13;
building that would both oper- easy entry and exit; their sut-&#13;
ate as a community theatre and faces must be finished in the&#13;
proclaim its belief in the • •muta- same materials as the outside of&#13;
btlity of society". the building', and they must be&#13;
Beigers major theoretical flooded with light.&#13;
interest is in the street and the Beige! described three pro-&#13;
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Proven in proctke. bettered by design, Alifabs expansion joints absorb all types of movement in all parts of a building.&#13;
Now Alifabs build on success, with o new range of expansion ioints,&#13;
Waterproof, dustproof and maintenance-free, they are unobtrusive, providing c loodbeoring, flush fitting design.&#13;
Manufactured to perform for the lifetime of the building, Aldabs multimovement expansion joints toke o load off your mind.&#13;
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Rood,  SSB. Tel: 62) 5744. 859571 GY&#13;
 jects in which he had followed sandwiched between two walls &#13;
Florian Beige! brought street life to the this approach. Two are unbuilt of (emphatically) solid mason. &#13;
RIBA. Mark Swenarton reports. competition entries: a timberconstruction sports hall (1975), ry. organised in elevation as an&#13;
"archetypal child's facade". &#13;
 and a tourist reception centre for the  with windows from small condown &#13;
 Devon village of Clovelly ( 1986), major interest wxsin cealcd galleries looking over the main space. walls at &#13;
Thoroughly the third. the much•lauded Half either end are very different; &#13;
 Moon Theatre in the Milc End sheet metal. thin and fluted. like &#13;
 Road ( 1979-85). a curtain. giving onto the open &#13;
 For a modernist architect the courtyards in front and behind &#13;
 brief for this project was a and linked by an implied &#13;
 dream: a radical theatre group "street" running at an angle &#13;
modern which wanted to break down the barrier between the theatre and across the auditorium. Within this space the performance area &#13;
 the city, to draw new audiences and the seating can bc arranged &#13;
 by reclaiming the classical rcp in a variety of configurations, &#13;
 for a popular audience, and to The Half Moon Theatre &#13;
 inhabit a building that could as design  carried out by Beigel &#13;
 easily house the paintings of and the "Architecture Bureau" &#13;
message local pensioners or schoolchildren as Hamlet or Sweeney at the Polytechnic of North London. where Beige! teaches. &#13;
 Todd. Beigel's ideas about Betgel emphastses that only the &#13;
 bringing the city inside the resources (studio, research &#13;
 building were thus already fellowship. Beigel's own time) &#13;
 present in the brief. allocated by the polytechnic. &#13;
 result (BD October 4. under its policy of community &#13;
 198S) was less a theatre than "a involvement, made it possible to &#13;
 little world of theatres". Thesite give the project the time that it &#13;
 is T-shaped. lying alongside and required. &#13;
 behind an existing Edwardian Time. as was emphasiscd in &#13;
 chapel (now converted into a the ensuing discussion, was the &#13;
 foyer), with an entrance from one thing lacking in the every- &#13;
 the street at the base of the Tand day commercial world. What. &#13;
 a disused cemetery beyond the Peter Ahrends wondered. could &#13;
 site at the rear. Beigel'ssolution a radical architect do if support &#13;
 rests on a series of courtyards. such as that given by the &#13;
 some literal and external. others polytechnic, and a client such as &#13;
 metaphorical and internal. the Half Moon Theatre. were &#13;
 The auditorium itself is not to hand? Will&#13;
 Humpty&#13;
Dumpty&#13;
Lumuted&#13;
Manufacturers, Suppliers 'mstaners of UPVC Windows. &#13;
  000 n  • NOT e keen, one&#13;
 Made tfyou think like to&#13;
Beigel — theatre or life. Picture: Geoff Beeckrnan.  &#13;
Tony Aldous examines the Green lobby's to be taken &#13;
arguments for the countryside and argues that a change of heart is necessary. for &#13;
Growing pains granted&#13;
STRICTLY MONTTORED QUALrry cövmot&#13;
DEPENDABLE SERVICING&#13;
TECHNICAL BACK-UP&#13;
GOOD DISTRIBUTION&#13;
We have built the bustness on this - and that is what we will continue to build on.&#13;
CONTACT: JOHN PEARCE&#13;
 Alders Way  Estate Pai ton TQ4 7PJ&#13;
Telephone; (0803) 526288/ 529%&#13;
OFFICE SPACE &#13;
straight-forward. old-fashioned ment dedicated to abolishing &#13;
preservation. Not what one had controls. The Greens. almost to a  &#13;
hoped for from the Council for the Protection of Rural England, man, oppose Tillingham Hallstyle developments. A powerful CITY FRINGE SMALL&#13;
%hich changed its name years ago argument in their favour is that STUDIO/OFFICE BRANCH OFFICE&#13;
to make the P in CPRE stand for inquiry inspectors, "ith trans• 1,500sqft, tstnoor,idealforthe &#13;
protection. (erred powers and excessive building designer, very brtsht, reeaeed&#13;
Today's countryside needs regard for ministerial circulars. €8,000 per enrwtn inc rates,  in neat  re.&#13;
change. Landscapes which are sanctioning dubious piece- service charge, insurance etc, +1'• 400 t.&#13;
farmers can no longer manage meal incursions into the green Stock Page •od meme&#13;
need discreet management to belt. Better to meet the bulk of Telephone 251 4171 &#13;
make the land more accessible. the demand with Bell-sited, well-  &#13;
comprehensible and enjoyable to designed settlements.  &#13;
all those millions who make Development in the country- SHOREDTCH PARKWAY NW'&#13;
informal countryside recreation side is going to happen. The STUDIO OFFICE SPACE&#13;
one of the country's most popular debate is not about whether, but Spaces immediate»• avObJe in &#13;
outdoor activities. where and how. Argument should shared designers studio in EC2. Sh•red use&#13;
Dwindling agricultural be site specific and it should Newly refurbiShedv all facilitjes Of&#13;
incomes must be supplemented benefit rural communitiesandthe provided, excellent light Car rd •eryy&#13;
from sources such as leisure, qualities of environment, design per€ng waildble. ycNtect&#13;
tourism. light industry, and hi- and the changing rural land• 01-377"77 Telephone 01-2611407&#13;
tech employment. scapes.  &#13;
NEWS of government plans for The fallacy of rural preser• loosening controls over "develop- vation is this. It looks at badly• ment" in the countryside have sited. badly-designed, inadeproduced shock waves of anger quately serviced development in and indignation (if not of surprise) the countryside, and proclaims from the "Green" lobby. "Iheir ''TO prevent this, we must say no concern is understandable and to virtually all development".&#13;
justifiable — some of their It isn't the case in today's ecoar ments are not. nomic and political climate. An ritain's Greens have gen- age of farm surpluses and reduced c erally opposed development in the or static subsidies means that the countryside, no matter how good nelfare of the farming community the proposals or how poor the is no longer a credible proxy for co countryside. They have been the welfare orrural communities. against conifer afforestation and Farmers now employ only a opposed well-landscaped car fraction of the rural population parking for visitors to the and spending power based on food countryside. production is no longer the This kind of resistance to dominant economic input. change is not conservation — it is Politically. we have a govern•&#13;
 &#13;
Enter 2 ON ENQUIRY EXPRESSCARD&#13;
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                <text>John Allan</text>
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                <text>13 February 1987</text>
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