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2006 Articles
FAT is a postmodernist issue: British pranksters get serious
Britain's new apartment boom: can't we do more than just add water?
The library of Babel: how to extend a timewarped masterpiece.
London’s Design Museum: the soap opera aspires to drama.
The incredible new architecture of wine: a publishing phenomenon.
It is cheating to muck around with algorithms: Caruso St. John celebrate their trad influences.
The dancing building: Siobhan Davies Dance gets its London base.
Modernism - or should that be Modernwasm?
John Soane's magician: the tragic genius of Joseph Gandy.
New wave: Grimshaw's first art gallery surges into Spain.
The unpronounceable masterpiece of the Industrial Revolution: Telford's Pontcysyllte Aqueduct.
Alain de Botton and the psychology of architecture.
A beard of stars: James Turrell's latest "Skyspace" makes him a populist artist-hero for the British.
Social housing gets stylish: Anglo-American architects Munkenbeck and Marshall redefine London living.
New Urbanism sweeps Britain: from Seaside to Sherford.
High resolution: Eurotecture invades Manhattan.
Iraqitect: Zaha Hadid commands the Guggenheim, but remembers her roots.
Pink Floyd, David Bowie, the Doors, the Rolling Stones and Oh! Calcutta: all part of the history of London’s revamped Roundhouse.
408 years after The Globe, the Royal Shakespeare Company finds it’s a pretty good template for its new theatres. What took them so long?
Arcadian idyll or suburban tearoom? The English garden pavilion gets a rethink.
The very English modern art gallery: a treasure chest of postwar stars, by the architect that knows them.
Mushroom or muffin? Rem Koolhaas’s helium-filled “Non-Pavilion” for the Serpentine Gallery in London.
Magnificence or mess? Luxembourg to Liverpool: building Capitals of Culture.
Eastern Eye: the new Jameel Gallery at London's V&A museum.
Tate Modern Tate 2: Herzog and de Meuron go gothic.
One Steppe Beyond: Norman Foster's Pyramid of Peace in Kazakhstan.
London's great Georgian churches come back to life: Hawksmoor and Gibbs restored.
Surely not the last words on the Tenth Venice Architecture Biennale, 2006.
Postmodernism is back, and this time it's got much more going for it. London's Young Vic theatre shows how.
Art and London psychogeography: Louise T. Blouin finds herself in Frestonia.
In the footsteps of Scott: Richard Griffiths Architects add to the gothic fantasy of London's St. Pancras Hotel.
Anti-icon architecture in Boston: Diller Scofidio + Renfro's Institute of Contemporary Arts.
Ornament revived: Caruso St. John's Museum of Childhood.