The Glasgow Issue: Architects are stitching Glasgow back together
Architects are adding a greater coherence to the city of Glasgow with a swathe of regeneration projects, writes Emily Booth, ahead of the AJ’s Glasgow-focussed content
Emily Booth is editor of the AJ – here are her editorials on current topics of debate within architecture
By Emily Booth 13 July 2023 1,133 Views
Architects are adding a greater coherence to the city of Glasgow with a swathe of regeneration projects, writes Emily Booth, ahead of the AJ’s Glasgow-focussed content
By Emily Booth 21 June 2023 847 Views
The latest data suggests that 2022, for all its challenges, was a bounce-back year
By Emily Booth 31 May 2023 1,692 Views
We need to find the joy in using reclaimed materials, writes Emily Booth
By Emily Booth 27 April 2023 862 Views
AJ Small Projects is surely one of the most joyful events in the architectural calendar, celebrating the vital and dynamic possibilities of working at a small scale and within modest budgets, says Emily Booth
By Emily Booth 30 March 2023 682 Views
The latest subject in our series of profiles featuring practitioners who aren’t afraid to shake things up has a bold message for architects: challenge the brief; think about how and why you build
By Emily Booth 28 February 2023 878 Views
There are many different kinds of architecture practice and in our latest issue we look at initiatives that take risks and focus on breathing new life into communities
By Emily Booth 19 January 2023 303 Views
Community comes across strongly in the January issue of the AJ, which takes a close look at a range of housing projects
By Emily Booth 19 December 2022 585 Views
It has been fascinating to see what has worked (and what has been less successful) in our recent series of building revisits, writes Emily Booth
By Emily Booth 27 November 2022 2,857 Views
Sheffield’s ‘green street’ shows that community can flourish when it’s given the space to breathe, says Emily Booth
By Emily Booth 25 October 2022 1,402 Views
The climate crisis is giving rise to a fundamental re-evaluation of what we should put into – and ask of – the built environment, say Emily Booth