• WWW.BDONLINE.CO.UK
    Allies & Morrison picked for groundbreaking transformation of Regent Street
    Practice to work on public realm improvements aiming to improve pedestrian experience in the heart of the West EndLondons Regent Street in the heart of the West EndAllies & Morrison has won a 1.7m job to lead an ambitious and groundbreaking transformation of the heart of Londons West End.Westminster council and the Crown Estate have appointed the practice to rethink Regent Street, Haymarket and Piccadilly Circus following a competition launched last summer.The project aims to prioritise [the] pedestrian experience by introducing more nature and greening, preserving the areas heritage and improving accessibility.The brief also aspires to reimagine the vision of John Nash, who designed the streets in the early 19th century, to connect St Jamess Park with Regents Park.Discussions are currently underway with the Greater London Authority and Transport for London seeking to ensure the streets deliver wide ranging benefits following Sadiq Khans announcement last year of plans to pedestrianise Oxford Street.Allies & Morrison will now draw up a public realm design ahead of a series of public engagement exercises aiming to shape the design which will be held over the course of this year.The council and Crown Estate have also set up an advisory panel consisting of local resident groups, landowners, developers, transport campaign groups and people with a range of protected characteristics.Daniel Elsea, Allies & Morrison partner and the firms director of landscape architecture Eric Hallquist said: As a practice that has always been engaged with the public realm and fascinated by the spaces between buildings, we are honoured to kick off 2025 with this new commission.We have assembled a creative coalition of designers, makers and doers, from the worlds of sustainability to contemporary art, to work with us, Westminster and The Crown Estate. Together, well help craft the future of the landmark destinations of Regent Street, Picadilly Circus and Haymarket to be enjoyed by everyone for decades to come.In September Khan said he wanted to revive a 150m plan to ban traffic on a 1.1km stretch of Oxford Street between Oxford Circus and Marble Arch.The London mayors previous attempt to transform the street into a pedestrianised public space was blocked by Westminster council in 2018 due to concerns over the need to reroute traffic into quieter surrounding streets.He is proposing the creation of a Mayoral Development Corporation which will have greater planning powers, although this will require a statutory period of consultation expected to take around two years.
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  • WWW.BDONLINE.CO.UK
    Housing planning approvals plummet to record-low, says HBF
    Unit approvals must increase by over 150% if government is to meet its 370,000-home annual targetData from the Home Builders Federation (HBF) has revealed the number of sites green-lit for development in the third quarter of 2024 was the lowest total since 2006.Source: HBFGraph showing number of project and unit approvals from Q1 2006 to Q3 2024The representative bodys latest Housing Pipeline Report showed a 10% decline in site approvals during the months July to September from the previous quarter, with 2,260 permissions granted.The rolling annual total of 10,180 site approvals also represents a record low, with housing project figures falling since the first quarter of 2018.Meanwhile, unit approvals are similarly going downhill. Despite a 2% increase in dwellings approved during the third quarter to 57,356, this figure is still 40% below the peak of 107,222 in the first quarter of 2021.The rolling annual total of 240,661 units saw a 1% rise from the second quarter 2024 but remains 6% lower than the same period in 2023.To meet the governments target of building 370,000 homes annually, approvals must increase by over 150%, according to the report.Regionally, some areas saw a more pronounced quarterly decrease in the number of homes being approved. The North East saw a 61% decline, while Yorkshire and the Humber approvals dropped by 49% and the West Midlands by 55%.London saw a slight increase in yearly approvals, achieving permission for 44,000 residences, which is still 66% of peak levels.Meanwhile, the sharpest decrease in the number of green-lit projects over the past 12 months were in the North West (-19%) and Yorkshire and the Humber (-18%).> Also read:Pennycook convinced 1.5 million homes are deliverable but wont commit to annual targetsNeil Jefferson, chief executive of the HBF said: The continued decline in planning approvals is deeply concerning and underlines the scale of the challenge we face in addressing the countrys housing crisis.We are seeing significant regional variation, with some areas experiencing severe drops in approvals, while others, like London, are still well below previous levels. This discrepancy highlights the need for targeted interventions that not only speed up planning processes but also provide clear support for both developers and homebuyers.The lack of affordable housing is impacting communities across the country, and without a stable demand for new homes, the industry lacks the confidence to invest in building the homes that are desperately needed.Increasing housing will require going beyond planning reform and addressing broader issues such as financing for homebuyers and a lack of providers in the market to take on the affordable housing developers build.The Housing Pipeline Report contained figures from construction data provider Glenigan.The report comes after the latestS&P Global UK Construction Purchasing Managers Index showed residential workregistered an overall decline in output during December with a score of 47.6, meaning the activity in the sector has now decreased for three consecutive months and the latest reduction was the fastest since June 2024.The monthly Halifax House Price Index published today showed prices dipped by 0.2% month on month on average in December following five months in a row of rises.> Also read:The new NPPF will help at the margins but does little to reform our planning system
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  • WWW.ARCHITECTSJOURNAL.CO.UK
    Award-winning Evans Vettori building investigated over possible defects
    According to the university, the Lyth building has been shut for investigations into possible defects and associated infrastructure work.According to local news provider Nottinghamshire Live, the building closed last spring after wet rot was discovered in its structural timber.The 11.5 million building at Brackenhurst the university's rural Southwell-based campus was completed in 2020 and was named RIBA East Midlands Building of the Year in 2022.AdvertisementIt officially opened in January 2023, serving as the new home of the universitys School of Animal, Rural and Environment Sciences, with research labs, teaching rooms, and a 200-capacity lecture theatre.Regarding the alleged defects, the buildings main contractor Clegg Construction confirmed to the AJ: There is an ongoing investigation that is being dealt with by PI Insurers.In September, NTU submitted a planning application for a temporary portacabin on the Brackenhurst Campus, which it said would provide alternative teaching and dining facilities while the Lyth building remains closed for essential improvement works.A cover letter submitted by planning consultant P&DG on behalf of NTU said the proposal would support the ongoing operation of the university, temporarily replacing the refectory in the Lyth Building, while it undergoes essential improvement works.The letter added: The Lyth Building is required to be vacant during the duration of the works, the timescales of which are not fully known at this time.AdvertisementThe planning application, which has yet to be ruled on by Newark & Sherwood Council, requires a temporary consent of up to five years for the portacabin.The temporary building would sit in the footprint of a now-demolished building on the campus, the Medlar building.An NTU spokesperson confirmed that the Lyth building has been temporarily closed for investigations into possible defects and associated infrastructure work.They added: Alternative, high-quality teaching and ancillary space has already been put in place to support our students.When the project won East Midlands Building of the Year in 2022, the RIBA jury said: The Lyth sits elegantly into its context of listed buildings and designed landscapes, while giving a centre and focus to the burgeoning campus of NTU. It has raised the bar for future development.Evans Vettori has been contacted for comment.
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  • WWW.ARCHITECTSJOURNAL.CO.UK
    Allies and Morrisons plans for fire-hit Clandon House branded barbaric
    The heritage preservation charity dropped a competition-winning Allies and Morrison proposal to rebuild and restore Clandon Park following a major U-turn in 2022, opting instead for a pared-back approach which would preserve its fire-damaged shell.At the time, a spokesperson said the trust had moved away from the original designs through a process of detailed feasibility with our design team. Allies and Morrison continues to lead on the design with conservation design support from Purcell.But submission of a planning application for the new design in November has incensed traditionalists, with architect Francis Terry accusing the National Trust of an act of barbarism against the Grade I-listed building, which is near Guildford in Surrey.AdvertisementTerry said the scheme would leave Clandons interior as a fire-damaged ruin with walkways, a lift shaft and a myriad of unsympathetic Modernist additions.In a statement, Terry added: This is an act of barbarism. This house should be restored to what it was, including the famous plasterwork, on which Clandons reputation as a great Georgian house rests. Source:NH53 (creative commons)The burnt-out shell of Clandon Park House, Surrey, after an accidental fire in 2015Following a devastating fire at Clandon in 2015, then-National Trust director Helen Ghosh said the 18th-century stately home had been reduced to essentially a shell.The Clandon redesign saga has wormed its way to the forefront of a major dispute within the National Trust in recent months, after activists within the organisation accused it of a tragic dereliction of duty by refusing to restore the mansion.The protestors known as the Restore Trust argue that the National Trust is failing to preserve its historic buildings in favour of modish, divisive ideologies.AdvertisementIn a design and access (D&A) statement, Allies and Morrison says its latest proposal, which include events space and walkways allowing views of Clandons scorched interiors, celebrates the beauty of the building that survived. Source:Allies and Morrison (taken from planning documents)Allies and Morrisons latest plans (Nov 2024) for Clandon Park House in Surrey walkways for displays and viewingThe National Trust insists the sensitive contemporary design of the light-touch proposals will bring Clandon Park back to life as a welcoming, engaging and fully functional house' and create an exciting new chapter in [the buildings] history.A spokesperson said the designs reflect in-depth conversations with heritage bodies, architectural specialists, community organisations and more than 75,000 visitors t0 Clandon since the fire. It added that public feedback had been overwhelmingly positive.The trust added: Our vision is for a house that showcases the importance and beauty of what survived the fire and celebrates the stories of the many people who made and crafted it over centuries.But Terry insists the faithful rebuilding of the mansion would give employment to traditional tradespeople and save the building from being lost, perhaps forever.The Classical architect dismissed as 'exaggerated fears that a full restoration of Clandon would lack the original build quality. Source:Jim Linwood creative commonsClandon Park House, Surrey, before the 2015 fire which badly damaged itIn its D&A, Allies and Morrison has said its pared-back proposal celebrates the beauty of the building that survived, displaying the visually dramatic and historically intriguing fire-damaged interiors while allowing visitors to learn the story of how it was designed, built and crafted over the centuries.The proposed scheme would renew the house as a fully functioning building, it said, with a new roof, windows, heating and structural repairs to conserve the surviving house, including its Speakers Parlour. Furniture and artworks would be returned to the house to form new displays.Interior walkways and a new public roof terrace will enable new ways of seeing and encountering the house that actively reveal its historic and architectural significance and enhance its visual drama, the practice added.Allies and Morrison was appointed in 2017 to lead the rebuild, following a star-studded contest run by Malcolm Reading Consultants. The top five AJ100 practice selected specialist Purcell to offer conservation design support.The first phase of construction works, repairing exterior walls and stonework, is expected to cost up to 20 million.Clandon Park was built in the 1720s by Venetian architect Giacomo Leoni and left to the National Trust in 1956.
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  • WWW.CNET.COM
    This Capacious Power Bank, Now Just $56 at Amazon, Can Charge 3 Devices at Once
    If you lucked out and got a new phone, handheld console or tablet over the holidays, then you might suddenly be worried keeping your new gadget powered when out and about. Thankfully, you don't have to spend a lot to get a beefy power bank to take on the go. Thanks to a deal on Amazon, you can currently get this powerful Ugreen 20,000-mAh power bank for just $56 if you use the coupon on the page for 30% off. See at AmazonThis immense power bank has a huge capacity -- enough to charge most phones multiple times over -- along with a total of 100-watt delivery as well. It has two USB-C ports and a USB-A port, so you can charge three devices at once, and one of those USB-C ports is rated for 65-watt fast charging meaning it can power larger devices like laptops. Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money.A convenient display on the side lets you quickly see how much power this battery has left meaning you're less likely to be left in the lurch when it runs out. Your $56 spend also gets you a USB-C cable which can be used to plug in one of your devices to recharge or top up the power bank itself. Top deals available today, according to CNET's shopping experts Curated discounts worth shopping while they last Apple AirTag, 4-pack: $70 (save $29)Costco 1-year Gold Star membership + $20 gift card: $65 (save $20)Anker 20-watt USB-C charger, 2-pack: $12 (save $7)Levoit LVAC-200 cordless vacuum: $160 (save $40)Peloton Bike: $1,145 (save $300) Why this deal mattersA good power bank is a genuine life-changer. It's such a small thing to be able to boost your battery charge while on the go, and whether you're travelling for work, hiking or just like being outside, keeping your devices topped up just makes sense. So, a chance to save 30% on one of this capacity is worth taking.
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  • WWW.CNET.COM
    This Robot Mower Unveiled at CES Moves Like a Tank and Has Mulching Blades
    As a with a medium-sized yard, I've been in the market for a robot mower. I've also been waiting for advances in the category hit to pile up as they often do in the early stages of a new (ish) home tech category before I splurge. That's to ensure I'm getting the best possible value for the many dollars I'll have to spend.A new robot launched at CES 2025, looks to be as proficient at cutting and navigating as the best, but has two special features that sets it apart from any other. The Lymow One is the first robot mower that can mulch. It also has tracked treads -- think tank wheels -- to navigate uneven terrain and even roll straight over certain obstacles such as small steps.Read more: Wildest CES 2025 robots that made us go 'huh'!I deplore long and arduous outdoor tasks such as raking and fertilizing, and this new mower will mitigate or possibly eliminate both in one fell swoop. Eye-Popping Home Tech Gadgets We're Loving From CES 2025 So Far See all photos The Lymow One ($2,999), which was revealed at the huge tech trade show in Las Vegas, has dual mulching blades -- the first ever for a robomower -- and is able macerate fallen leaves, branches and tree fruit and transform them into instant lawn fuel. That, coupled with the most comprehensive satellite navigation system racked treads that are able to traverse large and complex yards is enough to have me ordering one in time for summer.A Lymow rep told CNET that the mulching blades, a shift from the previous lateral scissor blades, are strong enough to cut grass and mulch debris like leaves, fruit, pine cones and small branches in wet or dry conditions. The same high-speed spinning mulching blades coupled with a centrifugal fan ensure fine clipping distribution without any clumping, a frequent nuisance for robomowers and push mowers alike. Beyond its mulching blades, the Lymow One relies on superior traction, dubbed the Savage Traverse System, along with tank-like wheels to glide over rough, uneven terrain. According to the brand rep, the One can clear obstacles up to 2 inches in height, traverse slopes of up to 45 degrees and even climb low stairs. It also works fast, covering up to 1.73 acres in a single day. Lymow One's tank-like wheels allow it to handle even the rockiest terrain. LymowThe One features boundary-wire-free navigation, meaning it'll find its way around your yard without a need for manual boundaries, and LySee Navigation combines with RTK satellite positioning and VSLAM for precise area mapping.According to the company, the latest Lymow robot mower has the most advanced obstacle recognition and avoidance in class for hours of unobstructed mowing: "Lymow is faster, cuts finer and is smarter than any current robotic mowers with the ability to distinguish and adapt its behavior when encountering various options."The Lymow One is available now for preorder for $2,999. Orders are set to be delivered in April, just in time for grass-cutting season.For more coverage of CES 2025, check out some of the new CES products you can actually purchase right now, or scroll through the most ridiculous and bizarre CES gadgets of this century. Watch this: I Made a Robot Vacuum Pick Up My Socks 02:50
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  • WWW.CNET.COM
    Free Movies You Can Stream This January on Tubi, Fawesome and More
    Overwhelmed by the endless price hikes on your favorite streaming platforms? Don't forget that free TV serviceslike Fawesome and Tubi have new movies and classic films premiering every month. This January, there are hundreds of new titles arriving across all of these streaming sites at no cost to you, including Oscar winners, cult classics and brand-new originals.On Tubi, you can catch loads of classics like Taxi Driver and Carrie, comedies like Barb and Star Go To Vista Del Mar and Something's Gotta Give plus several new original productions, including the action-packed (and excellently titled) Don't Mess With Grandma, the Peter Dinklage-led Western The Thicket and A Kill For A Kill, a Strangers On A Train-style psychological thriller. Over on Fawesome, they're loading up on indie dramas this month; be sure to catch A Single Man starring Colin Firth who was nominated for an Oscar for his role, as well as Carol, the 1950s period drama starring Cate Blanchett. All these, plus tons of other great new arrivals on Pluto TV, Roku and more are all headed your way this month; here's a look at some of the best free movies streaming this January.Read more: Best Free TV Streaming Services: Tubi, Pluto TV, Freevee and MoreTubiSee at Tubi Thicket Alberta Productions Inc./The Thicket US Inc. The Thicket (Jan. 10) The Tubi original Western The Thicket stars Peter Dinklage as a bounty hunter hired to find the sister of a man named Jack (Levon Hawke) after she was abducted by bank robbers. Despite's Jack's efforts to pull together a gang of allies to help locate the young woman, the kidnappers prove to be much more dangerous and deadly than expected. The cast also includes Juliette Lewis, Metallica frontman James Hetfield, Leslie Grace and Esm Creed-Miles. Tubi Don't Mess With Grandma (Jan. 24) Tubi's new original action comedy Don't Mess With Grandma is a classic take on the inept hero story. When a drunk Army Ranger named JT (Michael Jai White) visits his sweet and completely oblivious grandmother at her remote cabin, he's forced to take action when a group of armed robbers try to break in. As JT fends off the criminals, his Grandma remains wrapped up in her romance novel, blissfully unaware of all the vigilante justice being served around her. The film (which was previously known as Sunset Superman on the festival circuit) premieres on Jan. 24. Tubi A Kill For A Kill (Jan. 17) Tubi's catalog of original thrillers now includes A Kill For A Kill, a movie about a deceptive motivational speaker who gets caught up in a dangerous and deadly game when a fan suggests they kill each other's spouses. The film premieres on Jan. 17. Also on Tubi in January:Rye LaneThe Unbearable Weight of Massive TalentBarb And Star Go To Vista Del MarFargoControl Room (Jan. 22)Deepwater Horizon (Jan. 2)Taxi DiverCarrie (1976)Something's Gotta Give (2003)The Twilight SagaPrey (2022)2001: A Space OdysseyHotel MumbaiFawesomeSee at FawesomeBlue ValentineThe Bank JobDestroyerThe LimeyA Single ManPhilomenaCarol (Jan. 18)Letters to JulietRokuSee at RokuPlaying For KeepsViceroy's HouseA StrikeDragon BladeAll I See Is YouThe MisfitsThe Space Between UsTracersSpinning ManPluto TVSee at Pluto TVFatal AttractionBoundTrading PlacesLimitlessEscape From AlcatrazThe Golden ChildFace/OffFootlooseSaturday Night FeverMommie Dearest
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  • WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM
    Bad Sleep Leaves the Brain More Vulnerable to Intrusive Thoughts
    January 9, 20253 min readHeres Why Bad Sleep and Toxic Thoughts Go Hand-in-HandFindings reveal the memory-related brain processes that generate unwanted thoughts when people are sleep deprivedBy Rachel Nuwer edited by Gary Stix Rob Dobi/Getty ImagesImagine you are attending a friends housewarming party, andin front of everyoneyou spill a glass of red wine on their brand-new white couch. You are so mortified that every time you see this friend afterward, you immediately think of the couch mishap.Research has shown that how you react to that unwelcome recollection will depend on how much sleep you get. If youre well rested, your brain will be able to quickly suppress the negative memory. But if you are someone who is plagued by insomnia, then intrusive thoughts about what happenedand the unpleasant emotions attachedwill probably continue to bother you for some time.Now a new study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA provides insight into what, exactly, goes wrong in the sleep-deprived brain when such unwanted thoughts intrude. This could be an important piece of the puzzle in understanding why it is that people who are chronically sleep-deprived become at high risk of developing mental health problems, says Scott Cairney, an associate professor of psychology at the University of York in England and senior author of the findings.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.Cairney and his colleagues showed in an earlier study that sleep deprivation impairs peoples ability to suppress unwanted thoughts. But the team wanted to take those behavioral observations one step further, he says. Whats actually going on under the hood, in the brain, when people are not getting enough sleep?Previous research has demonstrated that the retrieval of memories of past events involves the hippocampus and that of a different part of the brain, the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (rDLPFC), is responsible for suppressing that retrieval process. Cairney and his colleagues hypothesized that sleep deprivation impairs the rDLPFCs ability to slam the breaks on the retrieval processes, he says.To test this, the researchers recruited 85 students. First, the team trained them to associate images of neutral faces with specific scenes, some of which were negative, such as a car crash or a fight. They form a rich connection between the face and the scene, so when you present them with the face in isolation, their brains will automatically engage in a retrieval process, Cairney says.Next, the researchers divided the participants into two groups. One group was made to stay up all night while the other was allowed to sleep in beds in the lab. Participants in the latter group were monitored for how much time they spent in rapid-eye-movement (REM) and non-REM sleep.In the morning all of the participants were shown images of the faces they had been previously trained with, but this time, the participants had to either think about the memory they had been trained to associate with the face or to suppress it. Throughout this task, their brain activity was measured using a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanner.The results confirmed Cairney and his colleagues hunch. Compared with the participants who had slept, those who had stayed up all night had significantly diminished rDLPFC activity when they were supposed to be suppressing intrusive thoughts. Conversely, activity in their hippocampus was elevated, likely because the rDLPFC was not shutting down the retrieval process it was engaging in. This finding showed that sleep deprivation does not cause a general decline in brain activity, Cairney says, but rather seems to specifically affect certain parts of the brain that are involved in executive function.Out of the participants who had slept the night before, the researchers also found a significant positive correlation between the amount of time they spent in REM sleep and rDLPFC activity, specifically when they were engaging in the memory suppression task. Thats interesting because many disorders associated with debilitating intrusive thoughts, such as depression and PTSD, are also associated with disturbances in REM, Cairney says.The intriguing new study suggests a key role that REM sleep seems to play in maintaining adequate memory control, says Zara Bergstrm, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Kent in England, who was not involved in the work. She adds, however, that it will be necessary for future research to manipulate REM sleep directly to confirm whether it does have a causal role in controlling memories and thoughts.Maria Wimber, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Glasgow, who also was not involved in the research, adds that the new studys findings have real potential to inform therapeutic approaches.Interventions that enhance REM sleep could become part of the therapy for disorders that are characterized by intrusive memories, like post-traumatic stress disorder, she says. This type of response might also be attempted for acute traumaa possible preventive measure to ensure that toxic memories and flashbacks never emerge at all.
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  • WWW.EUROGAMER.NET
    BioShock creator expected Irrational Games to continue after his departure, he says, blaming Take-Two for closure
    BioShock creator expected Irrational Games to continue after his departure, he says, blaming Take-Two for closure"The decision was made at a corporate level."Image credit: Irrational News by Ed Nightingale Deputy News Editor Published on Jan. 9, 2025 BioShock creator Ken Levine wanted developer Irrational Games to continue, and didn't expect publisher Take-Two to shut it down.In 2014 Levine announced he was "winding down" the studio to focus on a "different kind of game", meaning all but 15 Irrational employees were laid off.Now, in an interview with Edge Magazine (thanks GamesRadar), Levine has stated his intention was for Irrational to continue but the decision to close was "made at a corporate level".Judas - Story Trailer PS5 GamesWatch on YouTubeLevine discussed his time at Irrational following the release of BioShock Infinite and how this led to him parting ways with the studio."The closure of Irrational was complicated," he said. "I felt out of my depth in the role. You're this creative person, and all of a sudden, as your vision increases of what you want to do, you have to become a manager, in a way that you don't necessarily have any training or skill in. My mental health was a mess during Infinite. I was stressed out, a lot of personal things were going on in my life at the time, and then my parents both died. I just couldn't do it any more, and I didn't think I had the team's confidence."That's when he left, leaving the studio in the hands of Take-Two."So my intention was to go and say, 'Look, I just need to go start a new thing, and Irrational should continue'," he said. "That's why I didn't maintain the name Irrational. I thought they were going to continue. But it wasn't my company - I sold the company, so I worked for Take-Two, and the studio was theirs."The decision was made at a corporate level that they didn't think they should continue with the studio as a going concern. My feeling was that it probably would have made sense. Take-Two did a BioShock remaster - that would have been a good title for Irrational to get their head around, build a new creative director structure, and then build off of that once they had the confidence to do the next BioShock game. I don't think I was in any state to be a good leader for the team."Levine described trying to make the studio closure "the least painful layoff we could possibly do", but he didn't feel comfortable leading the team when his next project would have a long period of research and development. "The problem is - and you see this problem with big studios - what do you do with 300 people when you're going to have a multiple-year R&D project?" he said.Still, a "good chunk" of laid off developers returned to work on the yet-to-be-revealed next BioShock game.Levine, meanwhile, will this year release Judas with his new studio Ghost Story Games, which he previously described as being built from "narrative Lego".Levine also discussed with Edge the development of BioShock Infinite, which he pushed to make more action-oriented. That led to the Sky-Lines - something he would have developed further in a potential sequel."The problem was that the Sky-Lines were so expensive to build that we couldn't build enough space to support the feature," he said. "The team did a great job of bringing that feature to life - there was just not enough of it in the game for it to really land."If we had done a sequel to Infinite, I think I would have spent more time on that. That thing was built on Unreal Engine 3, which is not an outdoor engine. Sky-Lines were a lot of spit and chewing gum and prayers. Players would be surprised how much of games are put together with spit and chewing gum - even the best ones that have worked really well."Judas was last seen at Sony's PlayStation State of Play this time last year and is yet to receive a firm release date beyond 2025.
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  • WWW.EUROGAMER.NET
    Devastating Los Angeles fires shut down Fallout season 2
    Devastating Los Angeles fires shut down Fallout season 2Production suspended as natural disaster spreads.Image credit: Amazon News by Tom Phillips Editor-in-Chief Published on Jan. 9, 2025 Disastrous fires burning across multiple districts of Los Angeles have shut down production across Hollywood, impacting the filming of Fallout season 2 and a raft of other projects.Five people have so far been confirmed to have died and more than 130,000 have been evacuated as the city's worst ever wildfires continue to spread.BBC News reported today that the famous Sunset Boulevard now lies "in ruins", as flames approach the city's iconic Hollywood sign.Last night, Variety reported on the impact of the fires on LA's production industry, with all major studios suspending work. Amazon's Fallout season 2 had been due to film within the Santa Clarita area this week.NBCUniversal, CBS, Disney and Warner Bros. have also shut down their studios, impacting the filming of other shows such as Hacks, Ted, Suits: LA, NCIS, Grey's Anatomy and the Jimmy Kimmel Live show.While in most cases there is no immediate threat to the studios themselves, the LA Fire Department has revoked all filming permits due to air quality being deemed dangerous to health, and the need to keep roads open for emergency vehicles. This week's disaster has prompted criticism of LA's mayor Karen Bass, who recent cut the city's fire department budget, and renewed calls for a greater focus on the impacts of climate change.Production on Fallout's second season began in November, and was due to resume this week after a filming break over Christmas. Fallout's first season was a huge hit when it aired last year, with more than 65 million viewers in its first 16 days - Amazon's second-biggest launch ever, behind The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power. A week after its debut, Amazon quickly announced the series would return for more episodes.
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