RIBA Royal Institute of British Architects
The Royal Institute of British Architects is a professional membership organisation and aims to advance architecture by demonstrating benefit to society and promoting excellence in the profession.
The organisation's HQ is in a fine Grade II-listed 1930s building, designed by Grey Wornum, at the junction of Portland Place and Weymouth Street in London W1.
The building houses an extensive architecture bookshop, a café with outdoor terrace, galleries hosting exhibitions, lecture theatres for talks, and is home to one of the finest architectural libraries in the world.
An exhibition at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), featured 11 major projects plus competition entries of architectural practice James Stirling Michael Wilford and Associates. The aim...
The brief for the promotional materials of the Stirling Wilford exhibition at the Royal Institute of British Architects in London was to communicate the architecture in such a way that it would not...
The Journal of Architecture was launched in 1995 and is the longest standing, continously published, international, refereed publication on architecture in the UK. It has followed a policy of...