Grandorge: Doors
David Grandorge considers the abundance and significance in our lives of thresholds and doorways
Exhibitions, events and books investigating architecture and culture, including the Venice Biennale and the London Festival of Architecture
By David Grandorge 18 May 2023 266 Views
David Grandorge considers the abundance and significance in our lives of thresholds and doorways
By David Grandorge 21 April 2023 625 Views
Architects, artists, engineers, contractors and students gathered at a city farm in London’s Waterloo in March for a symposium on the impact of global warming on architecture
By David Grandorge 4 April 2023 611 Views
We should be grateful for the trees we have in our cities and encourage more of them to flourish, says David Grandorge
By David Grandorge 16 February 2023 820 Views
‘Smart’ phones are responsible for some rather disturbing intended and unintended consequences, writes David Grandorge
By David Grandorge 30 January 2023 1,597 Views
Apparata’s stripped-back but ‘empathetic and generous’ House for Artists collective housing settlement in Barking, east London, would make a pleasant home for anyone, writes David Grandorge
By David Grandorge 4 January 2023 935 Views
The model of a German cooling tower was part of a London Met project where students produced wooden models of industrial structures, writes David Grandorge
By David Grandorge 30 November 2022 729 Views
There is no waste in nature, yet we humans have become adept at producing it – in abundance, observes David Grandorge
By David Grandorge 21 November 2022 773 Views
David Grandorge travels to the Black Country for an encounter with transformed landscapes
By David Grandorge 3 October 2022 1,049 Views
Digital modelling might one day consign the physical model as a design tool to the same fate as photographic film
By David Grandorge 9 September 2022 923 Views
Since the 1950s the UK countryside has been subjected to wholesale industrialisation. Those who govern us have big choices to make about how we use this land in the future, writes David Grandorge