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Building Design

UK magazine (1970–2014)

Building Design

UK magazine (1970–2014)

FieldValue
logoBD logo - Intelligence for Architects.png
editorChloe McCulloch (Editorial Director)
Ben Flatman (Architectural Editor)
frequencyWeekly
circulation7,698 (2013)
categoryArchitecture
companyUnited Business Media
founded1969
firstdate
finaldateMarch 2014 (print)
countryUnited Kingdom
basedLondon
languageEnglish
website
issn0007-3423

Ben Flatman (Architectural Editor) Building Design, or BD, is a leading online platform for architectural news, analysis, and commentary, based in London.

BD was launched in 1969 by publisher Morgan Grampian as a closed circulation weekly at a time when high-tech architecture was just starting to take off. It ceased its print edition in March 2014, becoming a digital-only publication.

Unlike some other architectural publications, BDs editors and staff are mainly journalists rather than architects. The magazine is free to subscribers and offers limited free access to non-subscribers. It is funded by revenue from advertising.

Circulation

By 2025, Building Design had over 141,500 registered users and more than 17,100 paid users. Its website, bdonline.co.uk, attracted 79,000 unique users and over 210,000 page impressions per month. The publication also had a social media reach of 198,000 across Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

The publishing company is Assemble Media Group, which also publishes Building and Housing Today.

AYA and YAYA

BD hosts the Architect of the Year Awards and Young Architect of the Year in central London, attended annually by over 500 senior decision makers.

The Architect of the Year Awards reward the UK's top architectural practices behind excellent built projects. Since their launch in 2004, the awards have grown in size and stature, featuring entries and attendance from leading practices, and have become firmly established as a key event in the architectural calendar. The awards night is now one of the largest gatherings of architects in the UK.

The Young Architect of the Year Award recognises and rewards Europe's most promising new architects and practices. Previous winners have included Coffey Architects, Jonathan Hendry, Serie Architects, David Kohn Architects, Hackett Hall McKnight, Carmody Groarke, Nord and Lynch Architects.

World Architecture 100

BD publishes an annual ranking of the world's biggest architecture practices known as the World Architecture 100. The listing is distributed to the top FTSE 100 companies as well as BD subscribers and is available to buy online.

Carbuncle Cup

The Carbuncle Cup was ''BD'''s annual prize for the worst new architecture in the UK. It ran from 2006-2018, and was launched as a humorous counterpart to the Stirling Prize.

A shortlist was announced each summer, based on nominations from the public. The winner was selected by a small group of architecture critics and professionals.

Recent winners

, the winners were:

  • 2018 – Redrock Stockport, Stockport, Greater Manchester, by BDP
  • 2017 – Nova Victoria, City of Westminster, London, by PLP Architecture
  • 2016 – Lincoln Plaza, Isle of Dogs, London, by Hamiltons Architects
  • 2015 – 20 Fenchurch Street (the 'Walkie Talkie'), City of London, by Rafael Viñoly
  • 2014 – Woolwich Central, London, by Sheppard Robson
  • 2013 – 465 Caledonian Road, London, by Stephen George and Partners
  • 2012 – Cutty Sark Renovation, Greenwich, London, by Grimshaw Architects
  • 2011 – MediaCityUK, Salford, by Fairhurst, Chapman Taylor and Wilkinson Eyre
  • 2010 – Strata, Elephant and Castle, London, by BFLS
  • 2009 – Liverpool Ferry Terminal, Liverpool, by Hamilton Architects
  • 2008 – Radisson SAS Waterfront Hotel, Saint Helier, Jersey, by EPR Architects
  • 2007 – Opal Court, Leicester, by Stephen George and Partners
  • 2006 – Drake Circus Shopping Centre, Plymouth, by Chapman Taylor

Staff

The editorial director is Chloe McCulloch and the architectural editor is Ben Flatman.

Past editors and staff include Amanda Baillieu, Paul Finch, Peter Murray, Martin Pawley, Hugh Pearman, Marcus Fairs, Oliver Wainwright, Owen Hatherley and Kieran Long.

Campaigns

Building Design campaigned with the Twentieth Century Society for Robin Hood Gardens, a housing estate in Poplar, London, designed by Alison and Peter Smithson, to be listed and retained. It has likewise argued against the unnecessary demolition of old school buildings.

References

References

  1. ''Building Design'' (website): Contacts, https://www.bdonline.co.uk/contact-bd
  2. Muriel Emanuel. (23 January 2016). "Contemporary Architects". Palgrave Macmillan UK.
  3. (1991). "Building design". Peri Press.
  4. Woodman, Ellis. (14 March 2014). "As ever, the changing face of BD reflects the industry". Building Design.
  5. "About Building Design".
  6. "Architect of the Year Awards".
  7. "Architect of the Year Awards". BDOnline.
  8. "Young Architect of the Year". BDOnline.
  9. (February 11, 2013). "The 100 Largest Architecture Firms In the World". ArchDaily.
  10. (17 April 2021). "World Architecture 100".
  11. "Certificate of Circulation 2005–06". ABC.
  12. Greenslade, Roy. (24 September 2010). "As another magazine charges for access, where's the proof of paywall success?". Guardian.
  13. (12 September 2010). "Bricks, mortar and mateyness". Observer.
  14. "Winner of 2018 Carbuncle Cup announced". bdonline.co.uk.
  15. "Carbuncle Cup 2017 winner announced". bdonline.co.uk.
  16. "Hamiltons seeks planning for Tower Hamlets tower".
  17. (2 September 2015). "Carbuncle Cup: Walkie Talkie wins prize for worst building of the year". The Guardian.
  18. (3 September 2014). "Carbuncle Cup 2014 winner announced". BDOnline.
  19. "Carbuncle Cup winner 2013: A triumph for the dark side". BDOnline.
  20. Gilligan, Andrew. (13 September 2012). "Cutty Sark wins award as worst new building in Britain". The Daily Telegraph.
  21. (29 July 2011). "Media City or Media Shitty: that Carbuncle Cup nomination (analysis)". The Drum.
  22. (12 August 2010). "London's Strata tower wins Carbuncle Cup as Britain's ugliest new building". The Guardian.
  23. (13 August 2010). "Towering above its rivals to win the Carbuncle Cup". Independent.
  24. (4 September 2009). "Ferry terminal's Carbuncle award". BBC.
  25. "Paul Finch OBE". Design Council.
  26. Jenkins, David. (10 March 2008). "Martin Pawley". The Guardian.
  27. "Restoration Home". BBC Two.
  28. (26 June 2008). "Don't knock brutalism". Guardian.
  29. (30 November 2008). "Robin Hood Gardens – C20 launches campaign for funds".
  30. Wainwright, Martin. (24 January 2010). "English Heritage issues SOS – save old schools". Guardian.
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