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2005 Articles
Waving and shouting: Richard Rogers' National Assembly for Wales
Mythical beast becomes reality: London's Unicorn Theatre by Keith Willliams
Architecture rediscovers healthcare: Michael Hopkins' Evelina Children's Hospital in London
Life in the old barn yet: Simon Conder's modernism meets rural vernacular.
Not building: the lure of desolation.
Arcadian idyll: I.M. Pei's only English building is an ambitious rural pavilion.
The jewel versus the shed: on the Welsh waterfront, a new national museum opens.
Erich Mendelsohn and Serge Chermayeff's 1935 British masterpiece restored.
The soldier and the fox: Francis Alÿs gets the measure of London.
Scandinavia embraces Zaha Hadid: or is it vice-versa?
Frank Gehry and the land of the Prince Regent.
David Adjaye meets Alfred Nobel in Oslo: architecture for peace.
Obsessive, compulsive architecture: the McLaren motor-racing factory by Foster and Partners races up the Stirling Prize rankings.
The Frank Lloyd Wright legacy: an expensive taste in buildings.
Form defeats function: Renzo Piano's Paul Klee Centre, Switzerland.
The rising stars of British architecture. Or are they?
The remarkable Charles Jencks and his Highlands Maggie's Centre: a new building type emerges.
Alternative icons: get your new cultural buildings by stealth.
The ceilings of Jacques Herzog. Or: Swiss architects get emotional.
Town in country: the new galleries at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
Sublime madness in the new houses of music: Rem Koolhaas in Porto, Henning Larsen in Copenhagen.
A newer New Town for Edinburgh. Traditionalist Robert Adam mixes ancient with modern on the waterfront.
Return of the Goths: the last Anglican cathedral is nearly finished. And built to last 1,000 years.
Regeneration by the book: Brighton's public library heals the urban fabric.
Sir Terry Farrell's new Home Office, London: the Government building that isn't.
The pyramid of peace: Norman Foster assumes the monumental mantle of Boullée. In Kazakhstan.
Swords into sculpture: art students take over from soldiers next to Tate Britain.
Sophisticated regionalism: Stan Bolt's growing portfolio of modern houses in the West of England.
The remarkable Mark Fisher and his $180m Las Vegas theatre for Cirque du Soleil.
His Light Materials: Michael Hopkins and the Wellcome Trust headquarters.
Will Alsop: there's more to architecture than accountancy.
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