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Profile: Deirdre Dyson
‘Take a letter, Deirdre’ could have been the soundtrack to Deirdre Dyson’s life if she hadn’t had the doggedness and perseverance to pursue her love of art and switch track from being a secretary to getting herself into art school.
Salone del Mobile, Milan review
Editor Johnny Tucker and London Design Guide author Max Fraser pounded the pavements and piazzas to bring you the best design the city had to offer
Driverless cars could be on roads within four years, Queen says
During the Queen's annual speech of announcing what the UK government will be focused on over the coming the 12 months, she spoke very futuristically from her famously thick paper which takes the ink three days to dry, that the country will focus on space tourism, autonomous cars and drones.
Patrick Schumacher: Zaha’s incredible moves
Patrik Schumacher, a director of Zaha Hadid Architects, reflects on the startling curves and audacious moves that made Zaha Hadid’s work so compelling and daringly new to the profession
The 10 Best-Designed Cafes in the World for 2016
DesignCurial evaluates innovation and design to search for the world’s top cafes
Frank Gehry’s Fondation Louis Vuitton sets sail with multicoloured installation
New colourful ‘sails’ elevate the Louis Vuitton arts centre in Paris
Going public: Projects
Six projects from the public sector – from artwork in a hospital to a new primary school – reveal an abundance of innovation at work.
Public sector: Better treatment
Goodbye institutional corridors, hello vibrant civic centre. BDP’s Benedict Zucchi, architect of the Alder Hey in the Park children’s hospital, talks hospital design trends.
Public sector focus: Q&A
School designers give their views on the realities of having to work with today’s pared-back budgets.
Sainsbury’s Digital Lab by Chetwoods Architects
Maintaining a happy and productive workforce of digital creatives is one thing, but housing them in the basement is another. Sainsbury’s Digital Lab manages to do just that, thanks to a unique, collaborative design by Chetwoods Architects that repurposed unused underground space beneath a London office block. Herbert Wright digs out the story
