London is the world’s most expensive city to build in, but the reasons may surprise you. The city is well known for its high cost of living despite being far less crowded than cities such as Tokyo and New York. In fact, commercial real estate in London’s West End costs nearly twice as much as similarly sized spaces on New York’s Madison Avenue.
London: The Latest Architecture and News
Why is it So Expensive to Build in London?
Video: The Elevated London That Almost Was
Inspired by an article written by Michael Hebbert in 1993, Chris Bevan Lee's forty minute documentary explores the elevated post-war infrastructural redevelopment of the City of London, fragments of which still stand across the square mile today. The Pedway: Elevating London examines London planners' attempt to build an ambitious network of elevated walkways through the city that largely never saw completion. In a carefully produced film those 'pedways' that remain are photographed and discussed as symbols of a utopia that almost was.
London Science Museum Selects Wilkinson Eyre to Design Medical Galleries

London's Science Museum has announced Wilkinson Eyre as the winner of its competition to design new medical galleries. Winning the project over a shortlist of six other architects - including Caruso St John, Amanda Levete Architects and Haworth Tompkins - Wilkinson Eyre's £24 million galleries will occupy 3,000 square metres on the museum's first floor, almost doubling the size of the museum's existing galleries.
More on the Science Museum's transformation after the break
KPF Obtains Planning Permission for London's "New Bondway"

After months of planning and preliminary design, it is expected that architecture firm KPF will be given permission to proceed with their New Bondway project in Vauxhall, London. This residential complex is sited in the Vauxhall Nine Elms Battersea Opportunity Area, in close proximity to the new US embassy. The property was previously to be the site for the Octave Tower designed by Make architects, until the proposal was rejected by the Secretary of State.
North London Hospice / Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

-
Architects: Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
- Area: 8000 ft²
- Year: 2012
-
Professionals: Atelier Ten, Elliott Wood Partnership, Equals Consulting, Pavehall PLC, BBUK Landscape Architecture
The Workshop / Guy Hollaway Architects

-
Architects: Guy Hollaway Architects
- Year: 2013
Will Alsop Designs Apartment Tower on Stilts for London's South Bank

Led by Will Alsop, aLL Design’s funky apartment tower will soon add a whole lot of interest to London’s south bank. The tubular building, which tapers at the bottom and top, will rise above an existing four-storey building on purple stilts and be adorned with corten steel cladding, brightly colored balconies, and irregular rounded windows. Each apartment will include two balconies overlooking the River Thames and the neighboring heliport – bringing about the name “Heliport Heights.” To learn more about the lively design, keep reading after the break.
Dalston Studio / Cassion Castle Architects

-
Architects: Cassion Castle Architects
- Area: 60 m²
- Year: 2013
-
Professionals: Cassion Castle Architects, Structure Workshop
Performance Space: Marina Abramović at the Serpentine Gallery

One of the latest installations at London's Serpentine Gallery, where Smiljan Radic recently unveiled an ethereal pavilion, is Marina Abramović's performance installation entitled 512 Hours. Creating what has been described as "the simplest of settings" in one of the gallery's large spaces, the artwork employs Abramović's most frequently used material: herself. Coupled with the audience and a selection of common objects, the constantly changing sequence of events on display is the very first live installation by the artist displayed in the UK. Upon arrival, visitors are asked leave their baggage (including mobile phones, cameras and any other electronic equipment) behind in order to enter the exhibition. Find out more about what you can expect from it here.
OPSO / K-Studio

-
Architects: K-Studio
-
Professionals: HALO, Michael Alexander Consulting Engineers, OWN Property & Development
From Derelict Structure to Urban Cinema

The Cineroleum, a self-initiated project built in 2010 by London based practice Assemble Studio, transformed a derelict petrol station into a "hand-built" cinema on one of capital's busiest roads. Aimed at raising awareness to the wider potential for reusing the 4,000 empty petrol stations across the UK for public use, the adapted structure on Clerkenwell Road was "enclosed by an ornate curtain" strung from the "roof of the petrol station's forecourt. Described as an "improvisation of the decadent interiors that greeted audiences during cinema’s golden age," classic infusions of cinematic iconography were integrated into a space built from only cheap, reclaimed or donated materials.
The Yellow Building / Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

-
Architects: Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
- Area: 161500 ft²
- Year: 2008
-
Professionals: Laing O'Rourke, muf architecture, Norman Disney & Young
Competition Results: "Faith! A Place of Worship in London"

Faith!, the latest ideas-based challenge organised by Combo Competitions, asked participants to design a place of worship in London. In spite of the beguiling simplicity of the title, coupled with a typically open brief, the placed winners and three honourable mentions exhibit a diverse, exciting collection of conceptual drawings and visuals. With an interesting balance of playful interpretations and more grounded proposals, all start to address relevant socio-political issues - such as the mutual acceptance and peaceful co-existence of different religions - in some way. The competition asked participants first and foremost to seek to merge two concepts: religion and knowledge.
Barking Central / Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

-
Architects: Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
- Area: 376 ft²
- Year: 2010
-
Manufacturers: Trespa
-
Professionals: Faber Maunsell, Gill Associates, Nigel Rose LLP, Buro Happold, Grant Associates
Astudio Complete Youth Space in East London

British practice Astudio have recently completed a large youth space in Poplar, East London, featuring a gym, recording studios and performance hall alongside multiple social and learning spaces. Designed with the input from other 1600 young people and stakeholders, the four year project has been part of a wider initiative to address the inadequate provision of existing youth facilities in the London borough of Tower Hamlets. As the team's second youth space completed in the last year, Spotlight has recently been shortlisted for a World Architecture Festival Award.
Concrete House / Studio Gil

-
Architects: Studio Gil
- Year: 2014
-
Professionals: Studio Gil
Temple of Agape / Morag Myerscough + Luke Morgan

- Year: 2014
-
Professionals: Castle Scaffolding Ltd, Southbank Centre
Has The Surge Of Visitors to Museums & Galleries Reached A Tipping Point?

In an article for the New York Times Rachel Donadio examines Masterworks vs. the Masses. From the Louvre in Paris to London's British Museum, Florence's Uffizi to the Vatican Museums, the increasing surge of visitors to these international cultural nodes "has turned many museums into crowded, sauna-like spaces." Balancing everyone's right to be "nourished" by cultural experiences with protecting and preserving the works of art in question is a very real problem. According to Donadio, "even when the art is secure, the experience can become irksome." With some museums seeing annual visitors of up to 6.7 million visitors (British Museum), addressing the issues faced by institutions that are a victim of their own success is becoming more and more pressing. Read the article in full here.








