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001-084 - RIBA Low Res
April 2021
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Smart Home.
Smart Building.
Smart Life.
On.
What if we were to
KILIAN O’SULLIVAN
see more than just
black or white? On or
NIMTIM
off? What about the
world in between
them? With all its Comment Library Q&A Legal Photograph President
many shapes, colours 05 14 31 40 47 77
Complex questions Curl la Tourelle Jonathan Manns on the What have we learnt Ben Tynegate portrays Raising professional
and contrasts. Or in a
of history and ethics Head’s sensitive findings so far of the from remote site beauty and time in competence across the
breathless black matt. play out at Humboldt refurbishment of Suburban Taskforce visits? Venice globe
Forum in Berlin grade II listed Hornsey
Are we still even Library Opportunities Takeover: Leader Obit
School 32 Decolonising 49 78
talking about a switch, The elegant 06 Melopee School The sky’s the limit for architecture Money for town Trevor Dannatt, RFH
or are we actually Gira Esprit design Woods Bagot branches 20 Skyroom housing 42 centres is welcome for architect ‘summoned
talking about the most line now in bronze. out into the schools XDGA unites school, another sense of place by buildings’
Practical action by
sector with its library childcare centre, Plan for Use
exciting way to turn off students is taking
for St Mary’s Calne Eye Line
the light? giraltd.co.uk
nursery and sports 39 on subconscious Exchange
halls in a steel cage on Before designing, supremacism 51 81
Housing Ghent’s old docks think about how your Our annual drawing No beauty without
10
Off.
building will be used. competition is open sustainability
What informs housing The Plan for Use helps for entries
infill projects? Bell
Parting shot
Phillips on context, On the cover Opinion 82
constraints and local Hornsey Library facade 53 The Inkwell, George
contribution by Curl la Tourelle Head. Tszwai So probes the van Heukelom’s
Photograph by Kilian link between film HQ for Netherlands
O’Sullivan making and design railway
Average issue
circulation Which of our Future Winners do you tip for the top? Can we decolonise
26,495
ABC audited June 2020 architecture? Is Skyroom a solution? Join in: letters.ribaj@riba.org
Design Lines
RIBA Journal is published 12 times a year by the RIBA. The contents of this journal are copyright. Reproduction in part or in full is forbidden without permission of the editor. The opinions expressed by writers of signed articles
(even with pseudonyms) and letters appearing in the magazine are those of their respective authors; the RIBA and the RIBAJ are not responsible for these opinions or statements. The editor will give careful consideration to material
submitted – articles, photographs, drawings and so on – but does not undertake responsibility for damage or their safe return. ISSN 1463-9505 © RIBA 2021
Gira /
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BERLIN Museum Island, mixes exhibition and event spaces, res- in turn displaced the bombed 18th century Berlin Palace.
Franco Stella taurants, and administrative offices. It is a bold architec- The new building’s exterior is a complete reconstruction
Read the full story: tural statement but its implications go far beyond simple of the baroque palace, except for the modern eastern
ribaj.com/humboldtforum questions of aesthetics and urban planning. Because not facade. This was conceived by Italian architect Franco
only is the building itself daring – it will also house the Stella, who also came up with plans for the mostly mod-
city’s ethnological collections. Several stakeholders with ern interior of the Humboldt Forum. The site’s mixed use
wildly different perspectives are engaged in this debate, and style make an interesting approach to dealing with
and the building has become the battleground for a vehe- German history, but there is little sign of the institution
ment political discussion. being willing, or indeed equipped, to face the thorny
Questions are raging about how a society should deal problem of restitution.
with its past in order to move forward into the future. Rarely in history has a single building caused so
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histories of colonial exploitation be openly addressed? ing to see how the public reacts to the offers Humboldt
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The building occupies the completely razed site of the Forum makes. Laura Helena Wurth
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ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
CamdenLoc
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06 Buildings Buildings 07
School Xxxxxxx
Bumper harvest
At St Mary’s Calne in Wiltshire, the new
school library looks out on the gnarled fruit
trees of its orchard, evoking the interweav-
ing of books and trees as places of knowledge
St Mary’s Calne and Woods Bagot both have something extra and imagination. Woods Bagot’s design for
in their pockets with the new library in the school orchard the private girls’ boarding school takes the
Words: Eleanor Young Photographs: Will Pryce idea a stage further, with tall trunks of steel
branching into the roof’s faceted soffit.
The building is embedded in a soft buff
water-struck brick which echoes the colours
of the limestone that much of the town of
Calne is built with. This wraps in a U-shape
round the north, south and west facades,
whose slim windows peer out between the Above The roof is raised IN NUMBERS schools were open in the autumn. It is de-
bricks, turning the view away from the school up on steel ‘trees’ signed to work for all sorts of collaborations
service road and through the glazed eastern giving a clerestory right 660m2 and conversations, from clubs and talks to
around the first floor (as area
facade to the orchard, which is flanked by diagram, below).
reading the newspaper; as close as this school
teaching buildings and one of the boarding
JCT gets to a café. There are clusters of seats, a den
houses. A notional moat runs around the edge form of contract sunk into the concrete foundations under the
of the building to deal with level changes, staircase, individual reading pods and places
bridged delicately at the entrances. just to rest a book while browsing.
An element of interest and (almost) rusti- The soffit treatments give a sense of the
cation is added to the facade by the laying of difference between the ground and first
projecting bricks alternately in certain areas. floor. At ground level are neat baffles and
Then it sharpens up again as it is cut through strip lights and service trays. The first floor –
with lines of bronze vents for fresh air intake with a clerestory of frameless glazing around
at the base of bookshelves, and windows slic- the edge – looks up and out from beneath its
ing down the facade where the free space of canopy of timber triangles reaching off the
the book-lined library shifts into the hard- steel trunks. The lining of books is gently
working bookends of escape stairs and cel- put into perspective by the presence of the
lular spaces. sky and the orchard. This library may be
The library is conceived as both an ac- signalled as an academic building but the
WOODS BAGOT
ademic and a cosy place at the centre of the first floor will inspire dreams and imagina-
school. With 80 per cent of the girls boarding, tion as much as it will diligent research.
it proved a popular meeting place when The library has a modest place in this
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
08 Buildings
School
designed in wood, with a likely reduction in Waterman Group Engineered wood plank
MEP consultant Havwoods Bolon by
the embodied energy. Project director Debby Vector Design Missoni Zig Zag, Bolon
Ray was one of the authors of the LETI’s Cli- Quantity surveyor DM entrance matting
Equals Consulting INTRAsystems 3 5
mate Emergency Design Guide and reflects a
Lighting consultant Atrium Imola Sicily, in Natural, 6
little on how the building might have worked Fire safety consultant Bush Hammered and 1
harder to reduce energy use, now there is Ramboll Etched Tile, Imola
Facade consultant B-Line display and book 2
greater awareness of these issues some years
Eckersley O’Callaghan lighting Aktiva
on from initial design. Perhaps less glazing Acoustic consultant PVD bronze
to the east and the orchard would have been Sandy Brown ironmongery Allgood
one move (though she admits it would ‘chal- Landscape consultant Mistrale natural
Camlins ventilation system
lenge the parti’), timber trees as structure of CDM co-ordinator Gilberts 1 Reception desk
course and a tight rein on air tightness, con- Shore Engineering 2 Meeting room
tractor-depending. But there were moves to (We Make Shore) 3 Sunken reading space
Approved building 4 Tea point
reduce the embodied carbon with precast inspector MLM Group 5 Terrace
concrete beams for the first floor, rather than 6 Orchard
in situ. And at least all that glazing to the east
is shaded by the fruit trees.
Woods Bagot is better known for com-
WOODS BAGOT
mercial fit outs in the UK. But education feels
like a natural fit for Ray, who has worked in
the sector with Will Alsop and at AHMM. First floor plan
And the practice’s team in Australia has a
strong portfolio of education work. The li-
brary came to the practice through a con-
tact in that world who had a daughter at the
school – and it has spawned another project
as Woods Bagot is working with the school
on a science, technology, engineering and
maths building, currently in development. 6
Detail axonometric
C
D
The most visually striking of the three alternating solid and open balustrades giving
East End projects is Orwell House on Baron- a combination of privacy and openness.
ess Road, a 20-unit standalone block in the Is the colour too much? I’d say not. It’s
G
Dorset Estate in Bethnal Green. Here, there certainly bold and confident – the pink tones
was no shortage of architectural context – surprisingly well with the nearby red brick
A Clay facing brick the modernist estate was designed by Lub- of some of its neighbouring buildings and
B Steel support frame
etkin, Skinner and Bailey between 1951-57, makes a pleasing focal point. The contrasting
C Pigmented glass reinforced concrete panels
D Concrete paving slabs
and features a rich variety of scale and facade red metal frame behind the panels, however,
E Timber aluminium composite window system composition. The new infill nestles within does jar a little when glimpsed from behind
F Galvanised steel, zig-zag format balustrade these and has a rather prime position over- along the sides of the new block.
G Exposed concrete soffit with mineral paint finish looking a playground and park. It is oriented ‘We were trying to emulate, but not ape,
to address the park while its scale mediates the older buildings,’ says Bell Phillips asso-
1 Main entrance
2 Accessible apartments with private gardens facing park
between that of the adjacent buildings. ciate John Lineen, adding that while the in-
3 Cycle store There is no missing it. Rising six storeys tention was for the infill to fit in, there was
4 Refuse store and topped with a roof garden, the other- also the desire to announce the presence of
wise simple grey brick building is adorned the new social housing, and this the screen
with pink, glass-fibre reinforced concrete certainly does.
screens overlooking the park on the east ‘It’s a very simple building. The screens
and at the entrance on the west. Designed in were a way of mitigating the monotony of the
reference to the chequerboard design of two facade, in the same way pattern was used to
Bell Phillips is doing its bit for Bell Phillips Architects is no stranger to the infrastructural reasons. They may well be nearby buildings on the host estate, this fac- break down the scale of the original estate
challenges of the council housing infill site. sites with sensitive contexts, or, contrast- etted grid acts as a frame to the balcony, with buildings,’ he says.
the housing crisis, providing Hari Phillips reckons they’ve worked on ap- ingly, sites with a scarcity of significant, sur-
77 new homes on three infi ll proximately 30 to planning or built stage. rounding build context to work with. 2
Above The design of the Right All fl ats at Orwell
glass-fibre reinforced House are dual aspect,
projes in ea London ‘We’ve done a lot of car parks and garages Bell Phillips has just added three more car
concrete screens with living spaces linked
sites – the classic infill sites. We’ve seen them park infills to its portfolio, all for the London
Words: Pamela Buxton evolved from studies of externally by balcony.
all,’ he says. Borough of Tower Hamlets, which together neighbouring facades.
Photographs: Kilian O’Sullivan
And in doing so, it tackled the particular provide 77 units of much-needed new social 2
3
challenges that come hand in hand with such housing. In doing so, the practice has not only
projects. These typically include tricky con-
sultation – understandably, no-one likes to
navigated most of these issues, but sought
to address some of the residual problems of
4
The pink tones well with
the red brick of some of its
lose their car-parking or open spaces. Often each site. 1
Above Orwell House
creates a striking infill these infills are awkward sites that may have ‘It’s like micro-surgery. In that small
been left undeveloped for a reason, whether intervention, you’re trying to repair past
neighbouring buildings
0 5m
on the 1950s Dorset
Ground floor plan
Estate in Bethnal Green. proximity to noisy road or railway, or for mistakes,’ says Phillips.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
12 Buildings Buildings 13
Housing Xxxxxxx
5
6
3
1 4
0 5m
Ground floor plan
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
14 Buildings 15
Library
Right Opening of
Hornsey Library on
5 March 1965 by
Princess Alexandra.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
16 Buildings 17
Library
12
11
an abstract pattern resembling raindrops 15 14
running off a series of blinds and there is a
colourful mosaic. The bookcases are bright-
ly coloured and the two staircases boldly
4 2 5
cranked, each split into two flights and fea-
turing open terrazzo treads.
The refurbishment
The library’s renovation by Curl la Tourelle
Section
Head Architecture is a sensitive one, improv-
ing the building’s thermal performance with
a new roof, windows and heating system.
Inside, the architect has introduced a lift to
1
2
Cantilevered entranceway
Children’s sensory media and
reading room
7
8
9
Staff office
Buggy store
13 Exhibition hall
14 Cafe
15 Community and youth music
Additional lighting and furniture
fit with its 1960s look – a little bit
Community room
give access to the lending library balcony 3 Reception ‘shopfront’
10 Tenanted area library
4 Main library 16 Offices and community rooms
and made a clever alteration to the popular 11 Library mezzanine and silent
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
18 Buildings
Library
Magic box
Caption copy here copy A primary school, after-school care centre, nursery
here
and – at the top – indoor and outdoor sports facilities for
Caption copy here copy
both school and neighbourhood: at Melopee, in Ghent,
here all are stacked together in an urban biotope where
architecture becomes landscape in a ‘green’ building.
Designed by Xaveer De Geyter Architects (XDGA),
the new building has been baptised ‘Melopee’, after
on the docks
a poem written by Paul Van Ostayen, one of the
Lowlands’ greatest modernist poets. The verse captures
well the still, canalside nature of Ghent’s Old Docks,
on whose quays the new facility has been built. Playing
a major role in the 19th century during the city’s
industrialisation, the docks’ recent history proved to
be less poetic; and when the port facility was moved
further out to deeper waters, they were left behind,
somewhat marooned.
In 2004, the city’s development administration,
AGSOB, launched an urban development competition
It’s the 3D inventive playground that’s the bigge ‘City design for the Old Docks project area’, which
surprise at XDGA’s Melopee school in Ghent was won by Dutch firm OMA. It proposed a clever
Words: Koen Van Synghel Photographs: Maxime Delvaux ‘chopstick’ model, in which buildings along the
Opposite At Ghent’s
Melopee school, many
functions are stacked within
its steel grid box – and that
includes the playground.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
22 Critique 23
Melopee school
2625m²
Kindergarten + after-school
The Old Docks is an important part of Ghent. This urbanist, in 2002 De Geyter has written After Sprawl,
slide down to the ground floor
Program + plot
Administration
quarter will get about 3000 new dwellings which, in plot area in which he examines the phenomenon of urban sprawl. Refectory
a city of just 260,000 inhabitants, counts as a sizeable Via his research he distilled a method for analysing Sports hall + cafe
development. As well as extra offices, it was obvious 4630m² spatial hallmarks of today’s city and investigated new
interior area
that this new city quarter also needed such public ways to supplant old urban strategies. Rather than just as: shift, overlay,insert, hide, frame, found, connect,
services such as a school, nursery and sport facilities,
with the result that this ‘city building’ was conceived
3050m² complaining about sprawl, he explores ‘the cracks’ in
the urban condition and turns them into opportunities
array and add.
Here at Melopee, it looks like XDGA implemented
exterior area
and planned in the heart of the development area. to create spatial quality. To do this he has developed this urbanistic practice as a tool for creating a building,
To grasp the genius loci of this place, it’s crucial to different interventions, formulated in such keywords despite the fact that the practice was facing quite a
Passage
understand that some years after OMA’s urban plan challenge. The school, after school care centre and
was embedded in the masterplan, the city was keen sports facilities were given a relatively small plot of
to promote cultural activities on the site. From 2011 land. Not only that, but the masterplan demanded a
onwards, temporary ‘occupations’ became the order public right of way through the site. This complicated
of the day and cultural activities began taking place on the school’s layout, particularly the organisation of a
sites along the Schipperskaai, making this area ‘a site controlled, observed playground for pupils. It was clear
for relaxation and creative manoeuvres’. The so-called that on the ground floor, a link between building and
DOK summers became real and regular attractions, playground limited, if not impossible.
with cosy flea markets, performances, and visitors just XDGA responded with enthusiasm, developing a
Compactness
chilling on the urban beach. 3D playground stretched out over five floors. Some of
The city encouraged the Old Docks’ meanwhile uses these are curved or inclined planes, over which a path
to open up this formerly quite closed area and to show meanders between plants, creating the illusion of a hill.
its potential as a lively, inspiring and adventurous area. All the playgrounds are attributed a certain colour or
Below Exterior spaces
Its historic buildings and harbour infrastructure were readily connect back to geometrical structure, as if the architect has translated
envisaged to be used as anchor points in the new city interior ones, making the principles of human structures and archetypes that
quarter. It was an approach that was the antithesis to the journey through the Aldo van Eyck applied at the playgrounds he designed
the modernist paradigm of tabula rasa and the creation building a fluid event. for Amsterdam city government between 1947 and 1978.
of strictly zoned, monofunctional areas; and it’s fair to Given the playgrounds’ surface treatment, set in the
Bottom right Melopee
say that XDGA took on these aspirations as part of the 2x volumes is both a school and a grid of concrete and steel, the perception of and tactility
design essence of Melopee. social facility for the new of the space seems driven by the mineral, abstract
dockside community. language of Zen gardens. Rocks are scattered like a
Site plan The school is Right Playground areas, Richard Long land art installation, while a circular
part of a larger OMA-led including the slide sand
sandbox is cut out of the concrete floor. But this sandbox
masterplan for the Old pit, slip around within the
docks area of Ghent. steel structure. is used also as the landing pit for a set of slides, situated
alongside the steps to the first floor.
The magic of these playgrounds, whirling down
from the fourth floor, is that they are connected,
0 10m
Ground floor plan A
1
4
2 3
8
5 5
6
7
A
Second floor plan
10
9 16 10
Above An internal framed in a huge, ‘green’ cage; all these outdoor spaces
grandstand over the read as part of one big stacked room. As the outdoor
sports hall leads directly
space takes half of the plot, XDGA decided to frame
to the playground spaces
2
10 outside. this within a fence with climbing plants. Strategically
placed cut-outs create windows on the urban landscape
Bottom left Views out and connect the inside with the city centre; and the
Fourth floor plan from the sports hall show structure of the fence echoes the steel structure of the
the inter-relationships
14 building. Simple use of I-beams creates a spatial grid
of internal with external
2 13
spaces in the building. integrating building and playground. Beams passing
over the playground imply a notional ‘ceiling’, lending a
pleasant intimacy.
Key
Surprisingly, the playful structure of open and closed
1 School entrance
2 Playground
surfaces of the building and the playground possesses
12 15
3 Public passage an elegance reminiscent of Terragni’s 1936 Casa del
4 Staff room Fascio but with the physical complexity of a Rubik’s
5 Office areas Cube. Here, the internal pivot mechanism is replaced
11 8 6 Daycare centre/relax
areas
by a double height multi-functional hall, which can be
7 Daycare entrance used as indoor playground, cafeteria, theatre, etc. The
8 Technical spaces hall is situated on the first floor, and opens up to a big
9 Refectory and hall terrace from which kids can slide down to the ground
10 Primary classrooms
floor. Formed of pink-coloured brick, it acts like vibrant
11 Outdoor pitch
12 Sports hall
theatre, overlooked through large glazed panels by
13 Terrace classrooms and the corridors that serve them. But with
14 Cafe/viewing area its glazed panels and the spaces’ general open character,
15 Grandstand there’s a pleasant continuum suggesting that classroom
16 Break out/social area
and corridor can be used as one pedagogical space.
0 10m
Section AA
14
12
2
16
9 A2
4 4
0 1 5 10m
section A-A’
www.therooflightcompany.co.uk
enquiries@therooflightcompany.co.uk | 01993 833155
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Trusted by Architects, respected by Builders, loved by Homeowners.
28 Round table 29
Hilti fire safety round table
TOBY MORISON
work with the right mechanisms and Total BIM in a cheaper building and certainly doesn’t
the resources but it does create certain Gary Neal, head of fire at Skanska, argued result in a better one. There’s much greater
difficulties in experience,’ said professor for greater use of digital design tools, potential to improve quality, buildability,
John Cole, member of the RIBA expert saying, ‘We’ve got no excuse nowadays. efficiency, competence, save time and reduce
Risk and cost are words that have come behaviours that we then see throughout advisory group on fire safety. ‘Quite often Why can’t we design a building completely risk.’ While participants had differing views
to dominate the construction industry’s design, construction, occupation and that’s to do with the appointment of an before we’ve actually stuck a shovel in the on the industry’s way ahead, Farrance’s
contractual relationships. In its attempts to maintenance,’ she wrote. ‘The agreements employer representative, in my experience ground?’. The point was picked up by Paul words suggested a positive vision for the
minimise both, however, the industry has
left the greatest risk and cost to be borne by
Other countries are really, made determine the relationships between
those commissioning buildings, those
usually being a quantity surveyor or a
QS with project manager experience, but
Langford, global head of fire protection at
Hilti. ‘Some projects we’ve been involved in
future. •
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
Rooms on top User friendly 31
PLUS
– housing – Plan of Use
32 39
3A Composites is member of the What has the The current phase of research looks at London, where on the ‘Tree of
MCRMA and furthermore collabo-
taskforce been growth pressures are most significant. We initially Architecture’
doing?
Sixth floor plan buy the new homes. Savings through the use
0 1 2
1:100 [m]
0 1 2
1:100 [m]
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
34 Intelligence
Xxxxxxx
Emmaus (which is doing the same atop its development in Bermondsey designed by Above The 15 dual
STUDIO ARCHETYPE
headquarters in Bristol). The business must TDO architecture. The scheme, a 15 minute aspect homes for the
Bermondsey rooftop are
‘still wash its face commercially’, explains walk from Guy’s Hospital, is for 15 sustain-
manufactured offsite in
Kay. able, dual-aspect, 2 or 3 bed homes, preci- the UK.
Consequently, the firm’s operating mod- sion-manufactured offsite in the UK. It also
el is canny as well as commendable. It has involves installing renewable energy sources
secured £100 million from a large UK real and a communal outside space for the exist- the quality of their lives too, is really impor-
estate investor, which forms Skyroom’s ing brick and concrete apartment block. tant to us’, insists Kay.
Key Worker Homes Fund. Open until mid- Architects looking to work with Skyroom
April, this provides development financing Recognised assets must be bedded in the community and, criti-
to successful projects ranging in scale from Bespoke technology and MMC are the corner- cally have an in-depth understanding of pre-
a dozen to several hundred homes. Pro-bono stones of Skyroom’s model. Its two specialist cision manufacturing and the supply chain,
technical consultancy is available to all eligi- technologies are a proprietary podium system as TDO does. While the concept appears the
ble applicants, part of which involves identi- (PPS) and a geospatial mapping tool. One is a same across the board, sites vary from super-
fying viable development spaces. Architects structural solution to support the additional markets to apartment blocks to car parks –
on the lookout for an opportunity take note: massing on the existing structure – like an diverse and unique design challenges.
local authorities and housing associations, exoskeleton or ‘table’. The latter is used for But what of the pandemic? Aren’t we all
preferably in partnership with an architect, implementation studies and initiating Stage deserting the capital for the suburbs these
are invited to make an expression of interest 1 of the RIBA Plan of Work. It allows for com- days? Kay is unequivocal: ‘I believe cities
ASAP, before the application window closes. paratively simple scanning of parts of a city, will come roaring back and everyone will
After a two year slog spent developing revealing roof spaces that are ripe for conver- forget about ever thinking of moving to the
technology, securing funding and forming sion. Skyroom can then present the landown- suburbs’, he asserts. ‘Be it around economies
partnerships (such as with Innovate UK, er with the good news that it is sitting on ‘an of scale, minimising environmental impact, Platform 5 Architects
HM Land Registry and Ordnance Survey), unrealised and unrecognised asset’. increased cultural opportunities …scientif- Photography: Alan Williams
Skyroom finally has six jobs in the pipeline As for MMC, Kay’s attitude is to ‘like it for ically and socially cities work’. In any case it
and one live project: a four-storey air-space what it does, rather than in and of itself’. It has already licensed its proprietary technol-
offers standardisation to achieve economies ogy and intellectual property to businesses
of scale, reduces the embodied carbon cost in New York and Dublin, two other notori-
Craning in the homes will of a project, and minimises time on site and
disturbance to existing tenants. On the Ber-
ously unaffordable places.
So far, Skyroom is a small player in a big
take mere weeks. It’s vital mondsey project, dropping the new homes
onto the existing structure using cranes will
and complex market, but Kay’s hope is that it
is making ‘small interventions with outsider
the key worker housing be take mere weeks. It’s vital that the key work-
er housing should be well received, and ‘re-
impact’. Its model places key workers quite
literally at the top, so, ‘if we can succeed in
well received
specting and understanding who lives in the providing good quality scalable homes, that
building and how we can sincerely invest in can cascade down to society,’ he says. •
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
Intelligence 39
Sustainability
Four decades
of expertise.
Business, clients Design, construction
& services & technology
Nice design–
Millions of years does it work?
in the making Better designs consider how
the building will be used,
right from the art of the
process. How does RIBA’s
Plan for Use Guide help?
HUFTON+CROW
Above People collaborating around the occupancy evaluation looks like, and its role
Jess Hrivnak National Automotive Innovation Centre in in what the RIBA believes should become ar-
Coventry, designed by Cullinan Studio.
Lent is traditionally a time for reflection and chitects’ standard scope of services.
preparation, so it is fitting that the (Covid- However, Plan for Use is not just a tool for
delayed) Plan for Use Guide makes its appear- mistakes, the profession has not traditional- improving handover: to obtain greatest ben-
ance now. ly sought out, analysed or evaluated building efit, it needs to be applied in all eight stages of
The RIBA guide is the profession’s inter- performance shortcomings to improve suc- the Plan of Work. Of course, the benefits will
pretation of the Soft Landings Framework cessive design projects. In general, reflec- be maximised if it is adopted right from the
produced by the Usable Buildings Trust and tion and critical learning is something the outset at Stage 0 or 1. However, the ability to
BSRIA. Plan for Use focusses on the actions construction industry as a whole shies away do this will depend on project procurement
that are needed to prepare for the end goal: from, mostly for fear of reputational damage route, and an architect may join the pro-
namely, what needs to be planned and im- or litigation. However, if we are to tackle the ject only at a later work stage. Nevertheless,
plemented at each of the RIBA Plan of Work climate crisis, inequalities in housing provi- adopting Plan for Use will still be valuable
2020 stages to deliver high performing, effi- sion, fuel poverty, the accumulating waste and undertaking the activities outlined in the
cient and comfortable buildings. It concen- burden on our planet and the like, it is vital guidance for the relevant RIBA work stage
trates on learning lessons and feedback loops that we plan for and undertake this reflective will help to produce better building outcomes
and has three basic components: setting real- and critical learning on the efficacy, func- for everyone.
istic and measurable targets; completing Plan tionality and success of our buildings (our While the guide is directed primarily at
Slate is old. Hundreds of millions of years old. for Use activities; and measuring and evalu- ‘products’) under the strain of occupation. architects, it is intended to also assist clients
ating building performance and feedback. and other building professionals. It outlines
In those terms, we’ve only been around for the twinkling The document provides guidance and en- Cultural shift how to apply Plan for Use on different forms
of an eye. But after 40 years, SSQ is one of the world’s couragement for architects to plan buildings With the publication of the Plan for Use of contract, and also includes case study ex-
leading suppliers of quality slate and architectural stone. that are successful in use. Plan for Use aims Guide and the accompanying case studies, amples to illustrate the practical application
to inspire a more outcome-based approach to the RIBA is taking a lead on this cultur- in a range of projects, sectors and typologies.
Backed with four decades of expertise, and unparalleled design, an approach embedded in the Plan of al shift towards designing for measurable We hope that together with the RIBA Plan
passion for the product, we’re the only company capable Work as a project strategy. outcomes in favour of both people and plan- for Work 2020 and the RIBA Sustainable Out-
of bringing stunning Del Carmen® slate and Riverstone® et. The goal of the tool is to strengthen the comes Guide, the Plan for Use enables more
Argentinian Phyllite into the UK. Learning from the past learning within the profession and reinforce Practices to sign up and meet the ambitious
The brainchild of a group of experts, led by the architect’s role in raising awareness of targets of the RIBA 2030 Climate Challenge
Gary Clark and the RIBA Sustainable Fu- building performance in use. Overtime, and deliver projects that have the wellbeing
So if you need a beautiful, robust and reliable tures Group, the guide was written by Mike the RIBA expects attitudes towards Plan for of our communities, our planet and future
Chater and joins documents such as the Use within the profession to become second generations at heart. •
natural slate solution, speak to the experts on RIBA Sustainable Outcomes Guide to give nature, and that this way of thinking will be-
020 8961 7725 or email info@ssq.co.uk architects the essential tools to meet the come embedded in everyday practice across
Plan for Use Guide is available as a free
download from architecture.com
challenges of our times. all projects at every stage and every scale. Jess Hrivnak is a sustainable development
Notoriously bad at learning from past The guide outlines what light-touch post adviser, practice, at the RIBA
www.ssqgroup.com
ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
40 Intelligence 41
Site visits
ISTOCK LJUBAPHOTO
ceptable visuals alongside easy and effective
benefits look set to continue real time communications. This ease of com-
munication, using everyday smartphones or
tablets, is of real benefit for an inspecting ar-
chitect to direct the operative in response to
what the opening up work reveals.
Average extension of time claimed (%)
is not always what is built. Moreover, if the operatives who will need to be on site at the
Bart Kavanagh
reality on site is critical to the understanding same time as, and often at close quarters to, Virtual benefits
Site inspections are a part of daily life for of issues that are either in dispute or central the inspecting architect. Virtual site visits using these applications
architects. They enable them to get to the to correct construction, then an inspection of Dismantling of construction will also can be very effective in helping the architect
heart of the matter, either to undertake gen- that reality may be necessary to underpin the require skilled operatives who will usually to form an opinion. As well as providing a
eral reviews during construction, to establish credibility of the architect’s report, especial- have to work closely with the architect dur- vivid visual and oral record of the whole pro-
existing conditions where refurbishment or ly if a follow up inspection is being made of an ing the process. cedure and exposed result, such software can
alteration is being considered or to establish area previously visited physically. Physical site inspections were inevitably allow other colleagues to join from multiple
physical evidence when disputes arise, and In addition, inspections often require the prevented when social contact was prohibit- separate locations concurrently, reducing
the opinion of an expert witness is required. input of more than one attendee. Social dis- ed and restrictions on social contact continue the need for other participants on site.
According to HKA’s 2020 CRUX Insight tancing and travel restrictions which extend to present severe difficulties. For example, if As physical inspections on site become a
Report into the causes of construction pro- the time taken to get to site can make such scaffolding wall climbers or a MEWP plat- possibility again, safety with respect to the
ject delays, projects where site access issues visits doubly difficult. form of at least 2m wide are not available, virus will remain paramount. Key elements
arise tend to be significantly larger than av- physical inspections on site may be imprac- to be incorporated into the risk assessments
erage, based on the 194-strong sample of UK Dismantling construction ticable. Given the impact of site inspections, and protocols prepared by the architect
projects assessed. In part this is because the Where the issue involves the construction the need to establish alternative means to or expert include: the age and underlying
design and construction complexity of larg- rather than the layout of a building, for ex- conduct them is increasingly critical. health conditions of staff; the availability
er projects requires regular site access by ample, the fabric will need to be opened up When working remotely from home be- and quality of Personal Protective Equip-
the architect to clarify issues as they arise. to expose the components installed and the came a necessity, video-calling and confer- ment; training in the effective use of PPE;
Notably, our research indicates that more method and quality of the construction. Such encing quickly became commonplace. Most and whether the site can be reached without Average capital expenditure
than 70% of extension of time claims involve areas are often difficult to access; on roofs or people mastered the software and adapted using public transport. And an effective risk
‘access to site’ issues, some 9% ahead of other high up on external walls. Inspections here quite easily to the more stilted environment assessment and method statement by the
factors. will require scaffold towers or access ma- of the virtual meeting room. As social con- contractor, to ensure appropriate conditions
Given the criticality of site visits, what chinery, such as a cherry picker or a mobile tact rules eased, the question arose of how to on the work site, will be an essential pre-con-
happens when everyone is required either to elevating work platform (MEWP). These use or adapt this by now familiar technology dition for any physical site inspection.
stay at home or to restrict their movements must be installed and operated by skilled to carry out virtual site inspections. Nevertheless, the virtual site inspection
to avoid catching or spreading a potentially Some professional film production com- has proved to be a valuable child of necessity.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
42 Intelligence 43
Xxxxxxx
Takeover
as a result of their ethnic and economic education. We should recognise and credit
background by delivering outreach initiatives the talent of architects beyond the Western
with young people from disadvantaged canon, who have achieved success in their
Conservation Design, construction communities. own right.
& heritage & technology Decolonise Architecture believes global Architecture is a discipline shaped
architecture has equal standing to commonly by collaboration. We have the collective
Time to
taught conventional examples. Exposure ability to challenge overt and subtle bias.
to the depth of international architecture Decolonise Architecture aims to address
can equip students and professionals alike imbalanced power dynamics and believes
decolonise
with a wide palette of precedents. Our team that to be silent is to be complicit. By
regularly curates an alternative reading broadening horizons in education, we are
list and a weekly newsletter for students taking the first steps towards overcoming
that focuses on architects’ ideas and key the barriers that prevent our profession
The time for fine words on inclusion is building studies from around the world. from being a level playing field. Spreading
over: a group in Bath is taking decisive Similarly, we are working with the library awareness will always be necessary but by
praical aion to recognise all the world’s to provide literature on topics that address providing meaningful solutions, our industry
architecture’s relationship with race. Such can evolve into a more equitable space for all.
architeure, orm the discipline’s privilege endeavours form the base of the group’s
and face down imperialism’s legacy sustained collaboration with the department The Inclusive Review
to achieve meaningful curriculum change. The Inclusive Review was the first anti-
We are taught to be subtle, but too often Right Biomimicry: From classical to modernism, our Above Malqaf: Egypt. In this traditional windcatcher racism initiative implemented with the
Zimbabwe. The termite
we are silent. As we build for our society, cohorts are rarely given the chance to look turrets face the prevailing wind and redirect cool air architecture department at the University of
mound has been a key into the building. It warms up as it travels and is drawn
architecture continues to reflect its political precedent for passive
beyond the implicit red line boundary around Bath. The review is a flagship developmental
out through high level openings. It is now being looked
context, when the need for inclusivity clear. cooling techniques. Europe and Northern America. DA produces tool within architecture but can often display
at to meet the artifi cial cooling demands of Egypt
Our universities yearn to be beacons of According to inhabitat. fortnightly? ‘Technology Tuesday’ content to the significant prevailing subconscious bias.
diversity but the lecture hall upholds the com, the Eastgate highlight selected structural, environmental in depth tried and tested vernacular Written by students and approved by
Centre in Harare uses
status quo and suppresses the voices of and design principles from various countries. techniques that have worked for centuries? the department, the guide contains six
the same principles to
many through systemic inequality (further save $3.5mn in cooling
These serve as an introduction to the global Our ‘Spotlight’ content features key questions (below) which can be used
explored by CABE report Architecture and demands. variety of practical design solutions. As a architects that are conscious of their to check whether one’s own behaviour is
Race). Today’s students, born at a time of preliminary audience talks followed by result, designs that would normally be side- cultural heritage and take on challenges biased or offensive. In a concise and user-
higher social and climate awareness, are the smaller breakout groups to discuss potential lined as ‘primitive’ are showcased for their to defy the norm. The lore of Kahn’s and friendly format, many of the guidelines could
profession’s future. Fresh-faced and hoping changes. The ideas from the forum were effectiveness and ingenuity. These principles Lloyd Wright’s is well-founded and justified, easily be applied to a range of situations
to ‘do good’ via our designs, we enter an
architectural education that heavily favours
We should credit architects condensed into a report and led to nine
action points which have since defined our
of sustainable design have been championed
across all continents; we would be amiss to
but we ought to recognise the presence of
equals from around the world. From Francis
– from interactions in the workplace
to internal presentations or daily social
the privileged. Intricately tied to colonialism,
institutional racism is deeply harmful in
beyond the Western canon mission – for instance looking at how social
issues are presented, and ensuring social
not credit their contribution to our progress
today. Where material honesty and efficiency
Kéré’s schools in Burkina Faso to Yasmeen
Lari’s affordable housing in Pakistan.
interactions. This document is in circulation
in the department at Bath and is available for
architecture; its lack of acknowledgment context including slavery or colonialism is are celebrated, why not start by teaching These posts aim to highlight placemaking in all institutions and workplaces to adapt. •
maintains the hush. included alongside case studies. Below The Inclusive Review. Six key questions
countries that are undergoing architectural All authors are committee members of
Now Decolonise Architecture has broken Subsequently, we have been working to bear in mind to conduct an actively anti-racist decolonisation. Architecture has never been Decolonise Architecture:
the silence. We are a collective of students closely with the directors of studies for the architecture review. constrained by region and neither should our @decolonisearchitecture on Instagram
and alumni of the University of Bath – what BSc and MArch courses at Bath, as well
started as a 200-signatory open letter as external groups and organisations. In
became a student group tackling racism at answer to the RIBA’s reported attainment DO I ASK EVERY IS THIS RELEVANT TO WHAT WOULD YOU AM I BEING WHERE ARE YOU HOW CAN I BE
a grassroots level. Collaborating with staff Left Dougong: China.
gap, we have launched a department-specific STUDENT THIS? THE PROJECT? LIKE US TO CALL YOU? PREJUDICED? ‘REALLY’ FROM? AN ALLY?
across the university, we are enabling a The Dougong system report tool to develop a more inclusive This question offers an When relevant it is OK Asking how to pronounce Avoid generalisations Although some think this Remember it is not the
holistic and inclusive education. This method is a keystone technique environment for students of minority ethnic easy barometer to check to have conversations on an unfamiliar name is OK about people and places; harmless, issues arise student’s responsibility
of drawing out experiences, then examining in traditional Chinese backgrounds and provide support for any if your questions are general topics regarding and this lets the choice fall be accepting of students’ from the misconception to educate you. If your
architecture and uses
how to address systemic bias in our way of student who may experience discrimination. appropriate. Naturally, students’ home countries into the student’s hands. experiences and keep an of ethnicity indicating comments are questioned
no fi xings. Stacked
working and our treatment of others could interlocking brackets
Moreover, regular contact with wider conversations with etc, but do not treat the If a student asks you to open mind. Don’t assume nationality. The question it will not usually be out
be a model for your university or practice. form the timber frame university leadership is scaling up our impact students may vary, but student as a spokesperson. use their full name, do a student knows what implies distrust and of malice. Be open to self-
In July 2020, Decolonise Architecture structure and transfer to an institutional level – recent discussions the best way to check for Conversations on these not shorten/anglicise it. you are referring to when alienation. Give students improvement and do not
held an unprecedented online forum the heavy loads from with the university’s Widening Access prejudice is to ask yourself topics aren’t discouraged Giving it your best shot referencing architecture freedom to explain their be defensive. If you feel a
horizontal beams into
within the department which allowed and Participation team have focused on the following: ‘Do I ask but remember there is a as an effort made is more abroad. Avoid derogatory background if they wish fellow critic has breached
columns. Multiple
staff and students to openly share their brackets add elasticity
addressing the cause of lower acceptance every student to explain time and a place – let the respectful than changing comments and be aware but do not pry or make one of these guidelines,
experiences relating to systemic racism and earthquake rates of BAME students. We aim to halt themselves and their origin student maximise on their the name for your own that you do not know a assumptions when it is not stand up for the student;
and subconscious bias. The event featured resistance. the culture of students being left behind in this level of detail?’ time to present. convenience. student’s experience. relevant or stated by them. be quick to educate others.
Rafael Viñoly Architects was asked to the project provides a fully rebuilt linear The research space, the Kravis
provide large, flexible laboratory spaces, park that is open to the community and Research Building, occupies two open
extend campus gardens, maximise existing maintained by the university. floors of contiguous laboratory space, each
vistas, connect with existing research A campus that five years ago had no approximately 1000ft long and 105ft deep.
buildings and centralise community recognizable identity from the east now has Each floor is bisected by a large collaborative
amenities on a platform that sits 20ft above a singular, clear yet understated, presence space – with kitchen and dining facilities at
one of Manhattan’s major arterial highways. and has two new acres of gardens, 160,000ft 2 the midpoint – which looks out across the
The result is a campus extension that of new research space interconnecting ten Sze-Donohue Amphitheatre to the historic
is invisible from the University’s main existing buildings on campus, and shared Welch Hall facade.
entrance and historic campus walks and common spaces. The building was prefabricated in 19
extends the historic gardens. This is done modules to meet logistical requirements in a
via two monumental stairways, flanking cost effective and timely manner. Each 750-
Founder’s Hall, ascending from the main ton module was constructed in New Jersey,
campus walk to rooftop gardens and a transported by barge to the site, and hoisted
promenade overlooking the East River. by crane onto its foundations in five-hour
The building is a platform for pedestrian- intervals over 19 nights.
oriented vegetation, a dining commons, new The laboratory casework, write-up desks
conference centre and centralised offices and support rooms consist of a vertical
for the university’s senior leadership – each service module containing power, data,
with an individual identity expressed as and gases and supporting adjustable work
pavilions within a garden. When seen surfaces and storage components. The
from the east, the building’s 1000ft long modules plug into boxes beneath the raised
continuous horizontal band of steel and glass floor. The laboratory casework design allows
© HALKIN MASON
gently underscores and unifies the beautiful, for benches and support space to be modified
but disparate, campus buildings that had in response to changing research modalities.
grown organically over the last 120 years. The project’s site is its most sustainable
River Campus North East Aerial View
Between the building and the East River, aspect. It renders urban land usable, creates
new pedestrian-oriented garden spaces,
© TOBIASEVERKE
spaces. Redevelopment of the East River
esplanade renders the city’s public space
the Year The Scientific Equipment and Furniture Stavros Niarchos Foundation, David
All mechanical equipment is designed
to be located in two large mechanical rooms
embedded behind the existing schist wall
Association (SEFA) is a global trade Rockefeller River Campus and accessible from the FDR Drive for
association whose members are among Architect: Rafael Viñoly Architects, Jay maintenance. Laboratory exhaust is housed
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46 Guest content Celluloid lessons Future winners 47
Schlüter-Systems – opinion – tomorrow’s trailblazers
53 55
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48 Promotion Culture 49
SterlingOSB Zero competition Leader
THE BRIEF
Off Grid 2030 In this ideas competition, we are asking entrants to design
a single-family or muli-generational family home of no
If all goes to plan, we’ll be living better and more more than 200m2 GIA. This may be one or more storeys
in height. Terraces or courtyards may be addition to this.
su ainably in 2030. Show us how you imagine it and While the building will be made up of a palette of different
win £2500, courtesy of Norbord SterlingOSB Zero sustainable materials, we would like to see Norbord
SterlingOSB Zero being used as an integral part of the
overall material strategy. SterlingOSB Zero used externally
should be protected with a proposed cladding material and/
or insulation. Entrants should bear in mind the nature of
SterlingOSB Zero and to ensure propositions best utilise
Will cash for high reets
its material capabilities. Entrants’ designs will consider the
RIBA’s 2030 Climate Challenge. paint the towns red?
JUDGING
Judges will look for imaginative uses of SterlingOSB
Invement to reverse the long decline of town
Zero, as part of a proposal meeting the stipulated criteria. centres is welcome, but let’s keep the emphasis
Propositions should consider sustainability, structural on place, not politics, says Eleanor Young
and thermal aspects that will help make an environmental
exemplar of the design. While other materials will be an In the middle of town the words are severely incised places. A Swindon councillor celebrated, saying: ‘A ONLY ON RIBAJ.COM
integral part of the new proposition, the design should, in the
main, employ SterlingOSB Zero. The winning proposal will be
over the door: ‘Girls/ Boys’. Not that it is a school any
more. Schools have moved out to the edges of towns
crane is already on the Swindon skyline’.
The Towns Fund puts ‘place’ at the top of the list
It feels like the
the one that, in the minds of the judges, generates a solution and cities, serving new suburbs with spreading of investment – for its role in changing perceptions mainstream
that is spatially powerful, visually exciting, and best embodies classrooms in green playing fields. Hospitals moved – and urges winning councils to bring forward land profession
the aspirations of the RIBA 2030 Climate Challenge. too, wards stacked high into the fresh air, away from for development. Across the country in Bolton,
has become a
ZOOEY BRAUN PHOTOGRAPHY
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50 Guest content Competition 51
HP Drawing
HP’s new subscription model makes print a quick, easy and EYE LINE RULES
hassle-free service for architeure professionals We seek the best 2D representations of a building
design or concept through visual means. They may
be hand or digitally drawn, incorporating collage or
can choose from the very latest in HP’s any combination or overlay of methods. Video and
large format portfolio, including the HP straight photography excluded.
DesignJet T250 and T650 models. With a Enter in either the student or practitioner
small footprint, these printers have been category. The RIBA Journal reserves the right
designed for ease of use and meet the to reallocate to a different category if deemed
specific requirements of busy businesses necessary.
in the AEC sectors. Furthermore, the HP Maximum of three images per entry, which can
The HP ink always arrives in Service pilot scheme… It looked great value
without upfront costs so we went ahead.
different categories.
• Student category: images made by
classicism – and Bergamo.
Every year we are gratified by the
plenty of time and the scheme ‘The plan is working really well for us
and we cannot fault it. The HP ink always
those in architectural education or who
are submitting images made before final
originality, wit and talent represented in
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without the upkeep and maintenance costs.’ by those fully qualified and working in your best drawings and join a prestigious
Print At Your Service customers and to find out more, visit practice, whether for real-life projects or cohort of past winners and runners-up. •
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Culture 53
Opinion
FoamStone ®
‘Spaces gain expression from the
lived experience of occupants’
Put a camera in
SYTEX L-shape surrounds
& banding
your pencil case
Cinematography would be as useful a skill
for archites as drawing, says Tszwai So
My earliest recollection of experiencing architecture architectural critic Herbert Wright once argued:
without knowing it was from a film I watched as a ‘After all, they create the set for the drama that’s our
teenager called Chungking Express, the seminal day to day lives.’ Wright’s words remind me of Doyle’s
work by hallowed filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai. Set in pictures in Chungking Express.
Hong Kong, it concerns two unrelated love stories Some see film as an unexpected form of post
told in a fragmented and disjointed style, favouring occupancy study: ‘Film constitutes an accidental
the details of everyday lives over a conventionally archive that makes visible how we live, love, work
structured narrative. In Chungking Express I saw and sleep in buildings,’ said François Penz, professor
the normal life taking place in the exuberant built of architecture at Cambridge who has forensically
environment peculiar to Hong Kong: the cramped studied hundreds of moving pictures. Penz’s research
convenience store, compact domestic spaces, the has also highlighted a tendency to ignore lived
filthy interiors of the infamous Chungking mansion. experience in mainstream architecture.
The look and touch of stone The film showed the spaces in which most locals grew In late 2019 as a novice in film making, I was
up, but we often took for granted. invited to make a sketch set in Hong Kong, in
Lightweight mouldings – delivered in 4 weeks Wong’s early works are inseparable from
Christopher Doyle’s cinematography. Doyle used
collaboration with Chinachem Group, to represent
the city at the now postponed Venice Biennale.
a hand-held camera to shoot many of the scenes, The project took the film crew to where my journey
while borrowing the in situ neon and fluorescent began, Wong Kar-Wai’s Hong Kong – a city that,
CUSTOM PROFILES no extra charge lights to create the dreamy mood at night. The film architecturally speaking, with all its flaws, is nothing
INSTALL during or after construction was not about love, it was about the loneliness we short of magnificent.
all experienced living in cities; it was a cinematic The film is entitled E-motion-Al City, and part of
LIGHTWEIGHT install on brick, block, render, exterior insulation, timber-frame experience of everyday life, and the banal building it is about a two-year-old flâneuse and her as a grown
ROBUST any size, any shape delivered in 4 weeks elements pertaining to it such as the windows and up finding the topography of her birthplace, Tusen
EASY to handle, quick to install the doors were romanticised through Doyle’s lens. Wan, with her feet. Film making and architecture
Back then I was simply enchanted by the do share a high degree of commonality in their
cinematography and thought little of it, but years creative and production processes, as both involve
later I discovered Gaston Bachelard’s book, The storytelling, meticulous planning and an eye for
Poetics of Space, in which he re-examines basic detail weaving every part together while preserving PLANE SPOTTING
architectural components like the attic, cellar and the integrity of the central theme. But just as you One day while shooting
staircase, focusing not on their purposes but on can’t assume someone who can ride a bike is good at E-motion-Al City, we spotted
lived experience in those spaces. I realised that skateboarding, film making and architecture are two a plane that emerged from
Bachelard was narrating the kind of architecture very different disciplines. I experienced first-hand the rooftop of a high-rise
I saw in Wong’s film, and spaces could only be given the differences while making E-motion-Al City, but and swiftly vanished. We
Projes and
Left and below Strategic It raises nimtim’s profile, and she says being a mixed
and community projects practice definitely contributed to the upturn in 2020.
are where nimtim would
And nimtim is playing its part in helping address
principles
like to take the practice.
Seen here are ideas for
diversity, including working with the Stephen
a Make district, a model Lawrence Trust to mentor a student, work with the
for rural working (left) Architecture Foundation’s Young Trustees and giving
As its workload recovers from and living (below). lectures and joining panels for various universities.
Nimtim’s shift in gear is inevitably quite slow.
lockdowns, nimtim continues Its seven projects on site are all domestic. In the
to put community involvement, last seven years these have grown incrementally
remuneration and diversity high from neighbours and family friends turned clients
with small budgets to those with more money and
on its busy agenda.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
58 Culture
Future winners
CORPORATE MW40 ®
Above An early
European competition
entry by nimtim showed
a high density area of
energy and enterprise.
Taking a radical
Hagos and Bell met in 2009 when Bell was
working at Consarc Architects in London’s King’s
Cross and interviewed Hagos, successfully, for a
sideep job there. Their paths had crossed before then, but
they’d never been introduced. Bell did his Part 2 at
the Bartlett while Hagos was there doing his Part 1.
Hagos was scouted from the end of year show to work
Freehaus’ Jonathan Hagos and Right The co-working at Squire & Partners, returned to the Bartlett for
Tom Bell decided to broaden their space and café at The his Part 2 and then worked for several small firms
work beyond the food and drink Trampery on Tottenham
High Street in a former
including Studio Cullinan and Buck Architects.
Bell, on the other hand, spent six years at
seor ju at the right time gas company HQ that
Wilkinson Eyre working on Magma, Building
was burned out during
Words: Isabelle Priest Portrait: Ivan Jones the London Riots. Schools for the Future and a stint in Hong Kong where
he grew up, before joining Consarc. He was keen to
Above The Clement
‘I’m glad we did a business plan,’ explains Tom Bell. James Centre project
see variety in practice, not just big projects, and to be
‘If we hadn’t planned every step of the way, we would expands the site and client-facing and also work on a civic scale.
be in a very different position now.’ He is referring buildings for a growing While at Consarc, the two formed many of the
to the Covid crisis and the dire effect it could have educational charity, just values Freehaus is founded on, working on projects
around the corner from
had on his practice, Freehaus Design, which until such as the Icon Innovation Centre in Daventry and
Grenfell Tower. The new
recently relied heavily on commissions from the learning centre tries to
Oriental Club extension in central London.
food and beverage sector. blend with the domestic They left Consarc at the same time – Bell
Bell and co-director Jonathan Hagos set up the architecture around it. effectively starting Freehaus in his spare room before
practice in 2012 and, during its first five-year plan, getting in touch with Hagos, who was working as a
clients included Benugo, Square Pie, Bocca di Lupo production designer with his now-wife Nina Gerada
and Yotam Ottolenghi. They were good clients, on a feature film concerning migration from north
as were the fees but, explains Hagos, ‘at a certain Africa across the Mediterranean (he has also dabbled
point we became cognisant that our exposure to in making TV commercials). Bell and Hagos spent
more orthodox architectural stuff was missing – the first eight months plotting and discussing how to
for example, most obviously, building foundations.’ shape the practice.
‘Food and beverage needed to be a stepping stone,’ ‘As we knew we wouldn’t be able to draw big
adds Bell. So at this five-year point the directors salaries at the beginning, the emphasis was on what
decided to make a curveball hire by recruiting Ana Freehaus could offer us,’ says Hagos. ‘Tom had got
Beatriz Fernandes, a graphic and digital designer, married a few years earlier, I was about to. We knew
to refine how the studio presented outwardly and we wanted to have families and we were conscious of
refocus towards other types of work. The directors creating a practice that didn’t take over our lives. We
also decided to become more specialised – Bell wanted a team that would have positive experiences
became a certified Passivhaus designer and Hagos Below and left The in architecture and the workplace – no one stuck
an RIBA conservation registrant. Fernandez added new HQ in Southwark drawing toilet layouts.’
wayfinding and placemaking to the toolkit to for the Africa Centre, We’re speaking via Teams – Bell in the
provide a one-stop shop for clients. formerly based in Covent Cotswolds, where he lives, and Hagos in London.
Garden. The redesigned
Today, the main projects on Freehaus’ books are
facade encourages its
engagement and community-led schemes, many of activities to spill out
them backed by the Mayor of London’s Good Growth on to the street and
Fund. It has far fewer food and beverage projects, beyond with better
which is just as well after the year that sector has had. outreach, reshaping
the organisation’s
‘Beatriz helped with logos, tone of voice, the
recent history.
website and how to weave food and beverage into a
wider narrative,’ explains Bell. She encouraged the
practice to spring clean, relinquish some ambitions
and promote others, enabling them to draw out
the ingredients of its existing work that could Jonathan Hagos (left)
and Tom Bell (right)
demonstrate broader experience and competencies
at Freehaus Design’s
to clients – social and co-working spaces, cafés and Africa Centre, currently
listed buildings, working with multiple stakeholders under construction in
and multi-headed clients and dealing with Southwark.
rapid turnarounds.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
62 Culture
Future winners
SAFE? OR UNSAFE?
development Peper & Söhne Projekt GmbH, Bremen Photographer Anke Müllerklein, Hamburg
Project niu airport hotel, Bremen Architects Westphal Architekten BDA, Bremen Project
early jobs came through a contact at design agency
Double a
A couple of years after Jessam Al-Jawad and Dean Manolopoulou, recalls Pike. He was already working
Pike established their studio, its live projects included at David Chipperfield Architects, and introduced Al-
a boutique on Rome’s Via del Corso and a social Jawad to the practice. Both went on to spend 10 years
housing scheme on a disused garage site in Hackney. there, and its influence is present in the practice’s
Jessam Al-Jawad and Dean Pike are of one ‘We always wanted a diversity of work that allows ‘attitude of reductiveness and intention to keep it
professional mind, building unexpeedly us to grow as an office and as individuals,’ says simple’, says Al-Jawad. Long association has clearly
Al-Jawad. ‘We want every project to be different led to a close understanding between the partners,
complementary work reams in upmarket from any we’ve done before’. Now six years old and who habitually describe their interests and opinions
retail and social housing seven-strong, east London-based Al-Jawad Pike has in the plural – ‘we like’, ‘we want’, ‘we think’ – and
a portfolio that is notable for its range, with quantities having made a point, smoothly hand over to the other
Words: Chris Foges Portrait: Agnese Sanvito
of both retail and residential work, but unified by for elaboration.
a few common threads. Among them are a taste Departing to set up their own practice wasn’t a
for weighty, tactile materials and an enjoyment of grand plan. ‘It happened quite casually,’ says Pike.
construction: ‘How you put things together in a way ‘We were doing competitions together and waiting
Below Jessam Al-Jawad and that is joyful to experience,’ says Al-Jawad. to see what materialised.’ Opportunity knocked
Dean Pike photographed in
These shared interests were present from the with RIBA’s 2014 Regent Street Shop Windows
the east London studio that
the practice has occupied pair’s first meeting as diploma students in a Bartlett Project, which paired the architects with perfumier
since its foundation in 2014. unit taught by Níall McLaughlin and Yeoryia Penhaligon’s to develop a temporary installation.
They subsequently pitched Penhaligon’s with
a concept store design and secured a few months’
steady income to develop the work. ‘It was now
or never,’ says Al-Jawad. In their early 30s, they
were ‘old enough to have delivered a lot of work at
Chipperfield’s, but still young enough to be able to
work a bit harder and not be too scared that things
might not work out’.
That confidence paid off, and the concept store
proposal became 10 Penhaligon’s shops in Europe,
the US and Asia. More work in the luxury retail sector
followed. Four Italian outlets for leather goods maker
Celine are lined in grey concrete and nougat-like
Above A two-storey terrazzo, and feature onyx display cases and resin
STÅLE ERIKSEN
extension to a Victorian shelving. In Manchester, a flagship store for fashion
terraced house at King’s
brand Allsaints employs a tougher palette of concrete
Grove in south London
is constructed from
and textured render with galvanised steel ceilings
blockwork with oak and shelving units. Outside the conventional store
windows and interior environment, the practice has designed a pop-up
joinery. structure for Chloé in Beijing, and elaborate settings
for Burberry runway shows at London Fashion Week.
The latest addition to the practice’s retail portfolio
is a concession for skin-care brand Aesop within the
London department store Westfield. Wrapped in a
wavy wall of straight and curved terracotta-coloured
concrete blocks, it demonstrates the architects’
interest in creating strong architectural character
through the imaginative organisation of inexpensive
materials.
‘Working in retail is good for a young office
because you get to build quickly,’ says Pike. ‘The
turnaround for a project is maybe six months and
Left Completed in then you’ve got something to show.’ Store design also
2016, a Celine outlet offers considerable scope to experiment, adds Al-
in Rome is intended as
Jawad. ‘We see retail projects as essays in what might
SIMON MENGES
a calm counterpoint to
the visual overload of
later become a larger piece of work – an opportunity
the department store in to try things out at a smaller scale where we have quite
which it sits. a lot of creative freedom.’
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
66 Culture
Profile
From the outset the practice focussed on Caption copy here copy
developing parallel strands of residential work. here copy here copy
‘Rite of passage’ back extensions led to commissions here copy here copy
here copy here copy
for new private houses. At the same time, it was
here copy here copy
looking to break into social housing. Success in a here copy here copy
2016 competition led to an 11-home development of here copy
townhouses and mews homes for Hackney Council,
AL-JAWAD PIKE
which is approaching completion. Another scheme
for the same client is on site.
This work is usefully complementary to the retail
projects – slow-cooked, and with the constraints Above The Mandeville crisp, undisguised junctions – details that give the
of site, programme and tight budgets that provide Street social housing impression of simplicity but are hard to achieve.
‘different design opportunities and more challenges’, scheme, under ‘We didn’t work with top-end builders,’ says Al-
construction in east
says Al-Jawad. The same sensibility is brought to Jawad. ‘There’s always a struggle in the execution.
London, comprises
both fields. In a two-storey house extension on townhouses and mews, It takes hard graft, persuasion and resolve.’ That can
King’s Grove, Peckham, blockwork is used to create unified by two-toned mean doing more work than the fee can reasonably
architectural character in a way that prefigures the brickwork and gabled sustain. ‘Sometimes you’re prepared to do that for
Aesop store. Budget is also an important influence on roofs. your portfolio, but it doesn’t really work for bigger
the studio’s design approach, says Pike. ‘Often there housing projects when you’ve got salaries to pay.’
isn’t money for fine finishes; not overloading projects There, says Pike, the architect’s inclination to focus
with too many materials is a way of keeping them on a project’s essential character is advantageous:
economical.’ ‘It’s about not over-complicating the design, and
At King’s Grove glazing bars are hidden behind maximising the potential in certain areas – maybe a
slender beams, and oak joinery meets blockwork in really nice brick, high ceilings or big windows – that
you can protect through the procurement process.’
In its current housing projects the practice has
Below Blockwork Below right The Celine been employed to oversee construction, but that may
walls tinted with red outlet in Rome’s La not be the case in the larger-scale work it is pursuing.
STÅLE ERIKSEN
SIMON MENGES
produce and realise strong ideas for projects.’ Work
to date – pragmatic and refined, varied but consistent
– has laid solid foundations on which to build. •
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67 Culture 69
Future winners
of the Tiger
Garreth McMahon (left)
Belfast. RIBAJ first talked to them about doing this Adelaide Street. MMAS’s portfolio is peppered with sourcing leads, pushing ideas towards councillors
and Fearghal Murray in
Belfast.
profile in early 2019. The duo set the practice up in diverse projects, but McMahon and Murray had been to prise the door open. But it is a difficult place to
2013 but it has taken six or seven years to get financial prepping for this kind of tipping point for some time. practise architecture because you get in with one
stability. Only now are they getting the type of work The two met while working at Mackel & Doherty council and then it changes.’
Tenacity and realism have paved they wanted and are happy with to speak in depth Architects in 2005, right in the middle of the roaring In these ways Belfast is more of a big town than a
a eady path for MMAS founders about it. A charming and clever community farm on Celtic Tiger economic boom. McMahon had just done city like Dublin and London. The urban farm project
Garreth McMahon and Fearghal the edge of the M1 motorway in the west of the city Part II, Murray had finished Part I. There was a lot
is about to finish on site, and a sprawling country of positivity playing out after the 1998 Good Friday
Murray in Northern Ireland house made of clustered components, clinging to the Agreement in Northern Ireland in the early 2000s.
Words: Isabelle Priest Portrait: Aidan Monaghan edge of the fields in Dungannon, will complete in a Interesting work was sloshing around. The national
few months’ time. They say that slightly too many and local governments were investing in public
projects on paper haven’t materialised – perhaps buildings, tourism and museums like Titanic Belfast
Below The house at
Dungannon is inspired by these hang more heavily in their minds than they as well as the smaller grain. McMahon and Murray
the clustered buildings need to. We were already interested and impressed were introduced to architectural practice on a diet
of Irish vernacular back then. Though as with other articles, it is a shame of community projects and small interventions like
architecture. Murray we can’t now meet in person. Irish language schools (Ciarán Mackel is a full Irish
and McMahon see
So we are stuck on Teams. Me grounded in speaker). These were often temporary and modular,
parallels with southern
European architecture in London, McMahon and Murray are in their studio in restricted by funding, but had potential to make
its courtyards and single an enormous converted former woollen mill where decent architectural projects. This type of work
room plans. there are usually around 50 individual businesses. rubbed off on McMahon and Murray.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
70 Culture
Future winners
Publishing
over and during the past year schemes that had been
on hold since, say, 2017 have returned. Briefs are DETECTION
integrating more home workspaces and the work
tends to be rural as McMahon and Murray have
REFINED
always kept a foot back home. But the commissions
tend to have very lean budgets as end values rarely
warrant a higher-end approach. A scheme extending The flush mounted Soteria Dimension Optical Detector
a Victorian terrace in Belfast called Glandore Drive blends seamlessly into its environment, making it ideal
for interiors requiring a premium aesthetic. Available in
completed four houses for an unbelievable £280,000,
white with a hygienic wipe-clean finish.
including roof terraces and enhanced bay windows
that captured a porch-like space over the front door. Soteria Dimension is ideal for high-end interiors, from
‘No two projects are the same,’ says Murray. private homes, luxury hotels and designer shops to
started pro bono. But McMahon and Murray are not Above Castle Place, a ‘We’re always trying to do more with each item’ restaurants, galleries and bars.
Belfast-grown. McMahon is from County Tyrone, collaboration with OGU – a sill is a seat in a house, a clustered house re-
Architects, emerged
Murray from County Armagh. They came to work establishes a typically Irish vernacular and
because of coronavirus
here because of the Celtic Tiger optimism, wanting in Belfast. It consists of a
landscape, a park is a tool to promote social cohesion.
to get to know their capital and be part of progress. pavilion with a café and a There’s also a former workhouse in Clogher that will
Being ‘from the sticks’ has given them a healthy flower stall with vitrines accommodate a playgroup, Sure Start and Early Years
distance in proposing change, but it hasn’t quite gone to display images from Centre that is sensitive to its austere history but turns
local galleries.
to plan. the site round to redefine its future. As spring gets
‘Architects can be over optimistic about curing under way, MMAS’s approach is blossoming. •
social division,’ explains Murray. ‘Urban problems
are common to UK and Irish cities but they are
heightened in Belfast. There’s a lot of broken
streetscapes… Initially we were frustrated because
as architects you want to build but we have realised
the role is softer than that. It is about resetting
the perception of young and old people – who live,
for example, around a wall [built along sectarian Soteria Dimension
boundaries] – and what they want for it. It’s about
leading conversations about changing that wall or
Optical Detector
potentially taking it down.’ Part number FL5100-600APO
But the process for instigating change in these Below Glandore Drive
areas is complicated – in the first place even in (2016), Belfast, a • Comprehensively tested to exceed European
identifying who owns a wall or interface. And development of four Standards EN 54 Part 7 for optical detectors and EN
ballooning tourism over the past 20 years has given new terraced houses 54 Part 17 for isolators.
that take on the external
the walls value. Resistance to change can be strong • Chamberless technology eliminates dust and insect
proportions of the
– even children not around during the Troubles neighbouring Victorian ingress to reduce false alarms.
start with a defensive mindset. However, growing terraces.
• Supports all three levels of Apollo Protocol – XP95,
work in regenerating the city comes full circle for
MMAS which can draw on its early community RIBABooks.com Discovery and CoreProtocol – enabling the range to
be easily added onto existing Apollo systems.
work experience of very fixed budgets. The pair are
inspired by David Leech’s work ennobling buildings • Soteria Dimension can be simply used in the areas
by assembling standardised elements. MMAS is now required – standard Apollo detection can be used in
on an approved list to develop feasibility studies for less exposed areas.
Development Trusts NI, which helps groups acquire
AIDAN MONAGHAN (2)
Made in
'Filtering the home
through the landscape'
– McGinlay Bell's
Glasgow
Bearsden House
Young Glasgow practice McGinlay Bell is living proof where they were both exposed to the experimental
of the benefits of staying close to home. Its directors, teachings of Jonathan Charley, Per Kartvedt and
Brian McGinlay and Mark Bell, hail from Glasgow head of cultural studies, David Reat. ‘They were
and Kilmarnock, were made in Glasgow and, for driven by social, political and environmental issues
the most part, their frames of reference proudly of architecture and encouraged us to be thinkers, to
revolve around this city. Speaking on video call, they question, to be optimists!’ says McGinlay. The move
initially come across as an odd couple. McGinlay, they subsequently made into commercial practice
slickly coiffed in a crisp deep navy shirt buttoned to might seem strange – McGinlay to JM Architects and
the collar, seems the model of the driven, aspiring Bell to RMJM’s Glasgow office working under Paul
designer; whereas the more grizzled Bell, shy at first Stallan – but it allowed them to cut their teeth at a
and wearing a blue flannel shirt and beanie, appears larger scale and in office management. ‘It taught us
more like a Firth fisherman. After a while the shirt's Surrounded by their
about how firms actually run,’ recalls Bell. ‘At RMJM
conceit of a Vivienne Westwood logo will be revealed; working models, Mark I was thrown in at the deep end and got the confidence
and as for the reticence, like the eponymous lozenge, Bell and Brian McGinlay in to work on £50 million jobs with 15 builders on site
it’s not long before he warms up too. their new Hope St office in shouting at me; so I was never intimidated by the
the heart of Glasgow.
Setting up on their own in 2016, the two might move to an office of our own and small-scale work.’
have carved a niche for themselves in local domestic But it was the experience at Nord from 2007,
extensions and one-off houses, but the sense is that Left The practice's 101 McGinlay joining just prior to Bell, that proved
they have their eyes on bigger prizes – an ambition Vincent St project hopes formative for them both. The eight years they
to address recent changes
thwarted over the pandemic year though they both spent there saw them involved with some of its
in the way we work.
retain a Celtic optimism in adversity. The practice key schemes, including the 2010 Shingle House in
has just completed their latest home, Bearsden House, Dungeness for Living Architecture, for which Bell
on Glasgow’s northern fringes, a sizeable and stealth- was project architect. NORD’s skill with materials
like private home of full glazing, black-stained feeds into McGinlay Bell’s own work. ‘The domestic
timber and dark brick, displaying a clear ability to stuff lets you test out the brick, bronze or walnut
successfully manipulate materials – especially here detail but it’s in the commercial realm where these
in a conservation area. But it’s the plan they feel play out,’ says Bell.
proudest of. ‘It had a narrow frontage and a very long NORD dissolved in 2015, but the two felt the
plan on a landscaped site, and it was important that benefits when they set up on their own. Their elegant
the spaces connected back to nature in a particular and delicately detailed Phase II of the Glasgow Film
way,’ explains Bell. ‘We cut courtyards all through Theatre followed on from NORD’s Phase I, as did the
the plan so every part of the building was connected £4 million Maryhill Locks housing in Glasgow – a
to a garden space; pushing the idea of filtering the former NORD project and McGinlay Bells’ largest
home through the landscape … in the end we could to date. The scheme comprises 40 two, three and
have built it from anything.’ four-bed brick 'private affordable' homes for client
These obsessions with plan and materiality Bigg Regeneration on a narrow site with a steep level
Right Bearsden House on
JACK HOBHOUSE
are born of a very specific lineage, both directors change down to the River Kelvin. The terraces offer
Glasgow's north-west edge
having been part of the core team at Robin Lee and displays the simple material
views and potential for habitation of the roof spaces,
Alan Pert’s NORD Architects. The two first met in palette that characterises all embellished with decorative metalwork details at
2001 in their fifth year at Strathclyde University, the firm's output. the thresholds and openings. It is the kind of project
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
74 Culture
RIBA STUDENT
Future winners
SUPPORT FUND
Helping students in difficult times
that, McGinlay hopes, will finally get them noticed for Its office blocks punctuated with public courtyards The RIBA Student Support Fund provides
DAPPLE PHOTOGRAPHY
Above left A specialist
public housing, though Bell caveats this with a refusal centre for a cycling of leisure and cultural activity are seen as a model Coming from a low-income family and grants to Part 1 and 2 architecture students
to work for the punitively low fees most of these offer: fanatic client in Newton
Mearns, south-west
for the practice’s Dundee proposal for offices and being the first of the family to go to university who are in real need of financial support.
‘We’re a small firm; we simply can’t afford to do that.’ of Glasgow, proposes
start-up spaces enlivened with live/work, gallery and I always knew money would be tight. However,
As it stands, ongoing relationships with former leisure spaces – ‘active public spaces that permeate
accommodation bothies lockdown meant that I could no longer work
firms and the wider consultant team has kept them for fellow obsessives through the private blocks’. The proposal brings
and as I had a zero-hour contract I was not Sadly, the Covid pandemic has led to record
in the commercial work they’re craving. After to indulge in cycling together corporate office space with small business
being shelved for a year, two commercial projects holidays.
incubation and a ‘makers creation campus’ with furloughed. My dad also had to close his numbers of students applying. RIBA wants
in Glasgow city centre are coming back to life and, Above right The
Dundee University. This isn’t just about urban business which meant money was even tighter to assist as many as possible but we depend
post-pandemic, look like they’ll be developing into dramatic Phase II of planning, it’s a broader imagining of what uses might for my family. The grant gave me a sense on donations to make these grants possible.
something more interesting, thinks McGinlay. What Glasgow Film Theatre, be possible. ‘We’re helping the client to build a vision of relief that I did not need to rely on finding Now, more than ever, we need your support
was a standard office refurb at 101 Vincent Street using dark timber, of what the programme might be,’ says McGinlay.
brass and leather, won another job to keep studying and helped me to to help break barriers and make architecture
now has the potential to address ‘the changing nature With projects looking like they will pick up, the
the 2018 Architecture continue working towards my goals.
of office space – how you move away from raised Grand Prix Scottish
firm has just moved into new offices in anticipation.
Part 1 Student at Coventry University
accessible to all.
floors and suspended ceilings and talk instead about Design Award Not before time, I sense. Both partners, having
domestication and control of your own space’. spent a year working remotely while online teaching
For their first foray into masterplanning, they are a cohort of future architects at Strathclyde, are
developing a scheme in Dundee for publishing giant champing at the bit to be a ‘live’ office again. ‘It’s the
DC Thomson. McGinlay says they have to get their critical dialogue that’s missing and we’re itching
head around how to reinvigorate a whole area of the to get back to that play-off from one another to Please help support students in
need and make a donation today
Below The £4 million
city centre by bringing the client’s disused 20,000m² how a project develops,’ muses Bell on the missing
Maryhill Locks 'private
West Ward Works back into active use. Bell recalls engagement. ‘Catching something on screen as you
at architecture.com/donate
affordable' housing, with
a study trip to Berlin and a visit to Hackesche Höfe its piano nobile, is lent a walk by that could make all the difference to a project
in the city centre as an influence on their thinking. continental dignity. – and that we learned from NORD.’ •
architecture.com/donate
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com
76 Culture Left The napkin sketch Culture 77
that Renzo Piano drew
Competition at dinner with developer President
Irvine Sellar, which
proved to be the genesis
of The Shard design.
A renewed social
Time to
Bottom left Views from
the Shangri-La Hotel,
reflect
may help develop more
perspectives than the
obvious one.
The RIBA’s education initiatives can help raise
global professional competence, says Alan Jones
Unleash your imagination, The technological acceleration of the pandemic has specifically aimed at providing learners at all the GREEN WIN FOR RIBA
made our world smaller and more connected. Online career stages, a forum for debate and a clearing house The new Environmental
pent-up by lockdown, in platforms have become the accepted way to meet. for global discussion and debate about architecture. Audit Committee report,
SELLAR/RPBW
an undiurbed week in Engagement has soared, with online audiences larger, The new 2021 validation procedures are a Greening the post-Covid
London’s highe hotel more diverse and with a greater equity of voice. There blueprint for the 110 RIBA-validated architecture recovery, echoes the
is still a time-zone segregation in our ‘live’ world, schools as well as those seeking validation. The RIBA’s recommendations.
With better times on the horizon, Shangri- to Reflect’ proposes to be just that – time out RIBA JOURNAL ‘TIME TO REFLECT’ COMPETITION as well as more local, and personal matters causing themes and values for architectural education newly This was a big win for the
La Hotel, At The Shard, London, is offering – and will provide the opportunity for you The competition is run by RIBA Journal in conjunction disjunction. (The post-Brexit temporary breakdown emphasise skills for zero carbon design, responsible RIBA. After considering
the opportunity for ‘Time to Reflect’ to to take stock of your real life down there in with Shangri-La Hotel, At The Shard, London in supply lines to Northern Ireland comes to mind.) specification and design for user health and safety, its policy team’s written
escape from the daily home/office or work the rarefied air up here. FORMAT Zooming back out, everywhere there is a social ethical practice and behaviours, supporting social response to the inquiry
structures that might confi ne you and to You may wish to continue your everyday Competition entries will be submitted as a maximum 500-word contract between each profession and the society justice for all the communities that architects and oral evidence, the final
experience life from a new, different and practice work while there, using the proposal asking what you plan to do with your week at the Shangri- it serves, and it is the same for architects. Across serve, and understanding how research literacy report echoed several RIBA
liberating perspective. hotel’s lobby for design meetings or to win La Hotel, At The Shard, London. It will be assessed anonymously. countries and continents, climate change, public underscores an accountable built environment. recommendations including
Six RIBA-registered members will work over drinks or a meal at one of its Judges will be looking for proposals that pique their curiosity, are wellbeing and environmental equality are the The longstanding ‘earn and learn’ RIBA Studio setting embodied carbon
get the chance to spend a week in one of restaurants. Or you might want to spend the aspirational and far-reaching, wildly indulgent or boldly prosaic. common issues that must be tackled to create a better has enhanced its value as a highly credible online targets for new homes,
the hotel’s 202 rooms, located from level week away from your usual commitments Fun or serious, we want to know how the experience of being in physical world. Our way forward is to demonstrate vehicle for the cost-effective delivery of RIBA bringing forward funding
34-52 at Pritzker-Prize winner Renzo to start your personal research project after The Shard can feed into your thinking or practice. how architects’ ethics, values and ability to self-police qualifications. Connecting with international for improving energy
Piano’s dramatic 310m high tower; which, an invigorating morning swim in western Six winners will be selected for six one-week B&B residencies at align to and address these obstacles. partners is an obvious progression. Partnering efficiency and moving
since completing in 2012, has become an Europe’s highest hotel pool. Or, like Bill the Shangri-La Hotel, At The Shard, London, with a £100/day The RIBA has already started along this road and across all continents would broaden access to this towards the use of ‘green
unmistakable addition to the capital’s Murray’s Bob Harris in ‘Lost in Translation’, per diem for use within the hotel’s bars and restaurants. Winners’ I believe it can help the world by helping architects. socially inclusive alternative to university-based taxation’.
skyline. The opportunity can be taken up at you might just self-reflect, in excitement partners will have the option to stay as guests at the hotel for two Our 2020 education and CPD framework The Way learning. A recent Nigerian Institute of Architects
an agreed time over the year from September or ennui, on a dérive around Southwark’s consecutive nights. Winners will be asked to post once daily on the Ahead is the first strategic framework developed by event highlighted how such a partnership could align
2021. To win an exclusive stay in this iconic historic streets. The choice, and time, is RIBAJ’s Instagram feed an image and a thought for our followers. a membership body for architects that recognises its local graduates with the expectations of the UK
design, including £100 a day to spend at your yours to do what you will with. the unique identities and interconnectedness of profession and its regulator.
choice of the hotel’s restaurants and bars All we ask is that you leave a trace that JUDGES architectural academia and professional practice. On the international stage, these initiatives
(GŎNG, TĪNG and Bar 31), you just need to tell you were there, which the hotel will display Ben Campkin, professor of history and theory of architecture The four RIBA knowledge schedules for the will create confidence, showing how the global
us what you plan to do with your time there. to inspire self-reflection in other guests. It and urbanism at Bartlett School, University College London proposed mandatory competences and the CPD competence of the profession can be systematically
As a mid-career UK-based architect could be a sketch of some local landmark, Rhael Cape, aka LionHeart, award-winning poet and Hon FRIBA core curriculum together define a post-registration raised throughout the world. Having equivalence and
with at least five years of post-qualification a crisp detail in London Bridge station Jan-Carlos Kucharek, acting deputy editor, RIBA Journal curriculum for acquiring and enhancing an recognised standards of competence is essential to
practice behind you, you might be thinking that caught your eye, or an expansive William Mathews, founding partner, William Matthews Architects architect’s authentic core skills and reflect the achieve architects’ mobility, responsibility and value.
Lucy Tilley, associate principal, Adjaye Associates
days of the week optioned for you to share progression, and support the RIBA’s ambitions in
with your partner, we hope that ‘Time to respect of specialist accreditations.
HOLLY EXLEY
Reflect’ will become a good memory for you The new online RIBA Academy, launched in 2020, One world: The RIBA
both. So get writing your proposal – and already has over 500 hours of uploaded material. has to act locally and
elevate yourself! • It has the potential to offer short courses, content globally.
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com ribaj.com The RIBA Journal April 2021
78 Obituary
architecture
information and
Trevor Dannatt inspiration online
1920– 2021 IN MEMORIAM
Trevor Dannatt, who has died aged 101, was a Royal School in York (1966). Private homes included the
Academician, teacher and prolific writer, and a major now-listed Laslett House of 1958. In 1967, he won a Gerald Michael
figure in the generation of celebrated architects who competition to design a conference centre and hotel Langlay-Smith
qualified soon after World War Two. He was closely in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and in the 1980s received Elected 1955, Sevenoaks
involved in debate about the language of modernism a commission for the British Embassy there. His
and ‘humanist’ architecture, which informed his practice oversaw the transformation of the Royal Gordon Fairlie Polson
many thoughtful and sensitive buildings. Naval College Buildings at Greenwich into university Elected 1955, Victoria, BC, Canada
Dannatt grew up in Blackheath, south London, and accommodation, and was appointed consultant Janusz Seweryn Kent
attended Colfe’s school where his art teacher, Alfred architect to the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. Elected 1957, West Sussex
Hallet, introduced him to the work of Le Corbusier. He Involvement and collaboration with artists,
studied at the Regent Street Polytechnic from 1938. including his long-time friend Patrick Heron, also Donovan Ross Mincher
‘Within a few weeks I realised what I wanted to do’, he deeply influenced Dannatt’s architecture and saw Elected 1959, Staffordshire
later wrote. ‘I was “summoned by buildings”.’ In 1943 him accumulate a substantial collection of British and Frank Gerald John Green
he joined Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew, moving on in European paintings and works on paper, the major Elected 1961, Horsham
1948 to his former tutor Peter Moro, who was associate part of which was bequeathed to the Whitworth Art
architect with Sir Leslie Martin at the London Gallery at the University of Manchester. Frederick William
County Council Architects’ Department, in charge I was a student at the University of Manchester Chadwick
of developing the Royal Festival Hall. In 1952, a year when Dannatt was visiting professor. It was a Elected 1965, Dorset
after its completion, Dannatt left the LCC and set up in transitional time for the school, and at the start of John Leonard Pateman
private practice. He worked informally ‘in association my architectural education in 1975, the outgoing Elected 1966, Kent
with’ Martin and Colin St John Wilson, and in 1970 head had not been replaced, leaving a void. His
formed Trevor Dannatt and Partners. In 1994, his appointment brought much-needed architectural Peter Martin Joseph
ROB PETHERICK, COURTESY OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF ART, LONDON
former student David Johnson became a partner and leadership. He spoke of our ‘inner landscape’ of
Liverpool Metropolitan Branston
the firm was renamed Dannatt Johnson. Cathedral.
forms, Tarn
patterns, ideas and experiences, not just of Elected 1970, London
worked with the Art and
Scandinavian architecture was a pervasive architecture but of all forms of art. This, together Peter George Kennedy
Architecture Department
influence – particularly following visits to Sweden with his experience and profile, re-established the
of the Roman Catholic Elected 1958, Warlingham
and Denmark in the 1940s and to Finland in 1956. reputation
Archdiocese.of the school and formed a base for its
Dannatt’s accounts of that trip were published in future development. An elegant, lean figure around Harold Frank Seward
Elected 1954, Leamington Spa
Only RIBA members and Journal
Architectural Design and the Architects’ Year Book,
which he edited from 1948 to 1962. ‘All embodying
the studio, his quiet, thoughtful and erudite criticism
instilled a confidence, particularly in this former
subscribers enjoy unlimited access to
thought, care for the human dimension, creativity student, and left memories that are still cherished. exclusive online articles, multimedia
and plastic imagination, always well put together In 1953 Dannatt married artist Joan Howell
with colour and tactile sensibility,’ he later wrote. Davies and had two children, Clare and Adrian. The To inform the RIBA of and daily stories.
Like many contemporaries he benefited from the marriage was dissolved in 1991, and three years later the death of a member,
expansion of the welfare state, designing educational he married cancer specialist Ann Crawford who please email membership.
buildings such as a hall of residence at the University survives him, along with his son and daughter. • services@riba.org with Activate your online access
of Leicester (1960) and the assembly hall at Bootham Stephen Hodder is chairman of Hodder & Partners details of next of kin ribaj.com/activate
The RIBA Journal April 2021 ribaj.com
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2021
and the most beautifully designed. And if they are not,
then it is up to the Institute to throw down the gauntlet OWN INTERVIEW
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Sun on your face, a breeze in
your hair and sand on your feet.*
*beach not included.
Architecturally beautiful rooflights, designed to maximise the
amount of sunlight and air flowing into any property.