Supercrit #9: Sauerbruch Hutton present GSW Berlin | May 3, 2023 in M416, Marylebone Campus, University of Westminster at 15:00

When: Wednesday, 3rd of May 2023 at 3pm

Where: Robin Evans Room (M416), University of Westminster, 35 Marylebone Rd, NW1 5LS

To book you place via Eventbrite, please go here.

The acclaimed Supercrits series returns on May 3, with Louisa Hutton, Matthias Sauerbruch and Juan Lucas Young presenting Sauerbruch Hutton’s groundbreaking project GSW, completed in 1999, for a ‘crit’ by a panel of international critics and a public and student audience.

Built in ‘the magic (but brief) moment after the fall of the Berlin Wall, when the potential future was stronger than all of the present’, GSW suggested a new, progressive, environmentally responsible and beautiful architecture which could relink the severed halves of the city. An assembly of different parts and forms relating history and future, it pioneered an environmental approach as an expressive part of its architecture, notably in its beautifully coloured, adjustable, solar-shuttered facade, which acts as a ‘dynamic painting’ in reds and pinks, fusing occupancy and sustainability.

The panel of critics will include:

  • – Paul Finch, director of the World Architecture Festival;
  • – Susannah Hagan, founding director of RED (Research into Environment and Design) and Emerita Professor University of Westminster;
  • – Dirk van den Heuvel, Associate Professor of Architecture at TU Delft;
  • – Jennifer O’Donnell, founder of Plattenbau Studio;
  • – Oliver Wainwright, architecture and design critic at the Guardian.

The event will be chaired by Kester Rattenbury, Paolo Zaide and Conor Sheehan (Studio MASH).

Devised in 2003 by the research group EXP at the University of Westminster, Supercrits invites the world’s most influential architects ‘back to school’ to present a well known project to an expert panel and student audience. Former Supercrits have been Cedric Price: Potteries ThinkBelt; Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown: Learning From Las Vegas; Richard Rogers: The Pompidou Centre; Bernard Tschumi: Parc de la Villette; Rem Koolhaas: Delirious New York; Leon Krier: Poundbury; Michael Wilford: Neue Staatsgalerie; and Will Alsop: Le Grand Bleu.

More information on previous Supercrits can be found at:

website www.supercrits.com

books https://www.routledge.com/Supercrit/book-series/SUPERCRITS

instagram @supercrits

The event is free to attend, however places are limited and a valid ticket will be required for entry.

Borderline City | Invitation to Summer School in Berlin | Deadline: November 20, 2019

An opportunity for 4-6 suitable graduate students (and strong undergraduate candidates) from the fields of Architecture, Urban Planning, Urban Design etc. for a Summer School on the topic of  the ‘BORDERLINE City‘ that will take place in Berlin from 8-15 May 2020Participation is free, and accommodation as well as a stipend to cover travel expenses will be provided

The summer school is part of a broader initiative of colleagues at the Technical University Berlin, which aims to generate impulses for the planned update of the so-called Leipzig Charter of 2007 on the occasion of Germany’s upcoming EU Council Presidency in 2020.

The summer school’s theme is deliberately broad in scope. Amongst other things, the event will deal with:

  • the disappearance of existing, and emergence of new, borders and ‘borderscapes’, both material and immaterial;  
  • the way both intentional and immanent spatial development contribute to the emergence, dissolving and change of borders and ‘borderscapes’; 
  • the role cross-border territories (can) play in European integration processes;
  • the qualities and potentials of borders, ‘borderscapes’ etc. (spatial, cultural and otherwise) as well as
  • the question how built environment professionals should deal with the same. 

In short: it promises to be an exciting event! Prerequisite to participate is the willingness to:

  • deal with the topic (or, rather, one of the topics) the summer school revolves around in the context of a dissertation, a ‘final year project’, or a piece of research in relation to a specific module;  
  • present the (preliminary) findings of the (research) project in the form of a paper, poster or other creative medium; an
  • beyond that actively contribute to the discussions in Berlin.

There is a lot of scope in terms of both the content and the methodological approach and the format of the work to be produced/presented and our German colleagues appreciate that MA theses/final year projects will not be completed by the time the summer school takes place. What they are after are original and thought-provoking ideas, interventions and reflections that provide ‘novel and unconventional input on urban development and urban planning.’ 

Should you be interested in participating, please look at the attached document for further information about the project and send an expression of interest of no more than 750 words with an indication of your motivation to apply as well as a description of your project idea to NovyJ@westminster.ac.uk by 20 November. You should also be able to name a member of staff who supports your application and is willing to help you with the project work. Applicants will be informed of the pre-selection results by 25 November and interviews for the final selection will take place shortly after that.

For more information, please feel free to send an email to Johannes Novy. He will also hold two information drop-in sessions on 30 October and 12 November from 13.00 to 14.00 in M222 to provide the students with an opportunity to meet him in person and ask questions.

Last but not least: Especially if you are considering to apply with your thesis/final year project, it is strongly recommend that you discuss your plan with your tutor and/or course director to make sure that they approve of (and are willing to support) it. 

To download additional material please click here.

Student Competition “The Merck Crystal Pavilion” – Deadline: Friday, 27th October

Merck, in association with World Architecture Festival and the Architectural Review, is launching a competition for architecture students registered with any architectural school in the world.

The aim of the competition is to encourage thinking about developments in dynamic glass manufacture which relates to efficiency in energy performance, and in the possibilities of using liquid crystal technology as part of display/artistic/communications initiatives. See the full entry criteria here.

All finalists will be invited to present their projects to our esteemed judges at the World Architecture Festival (WAF) in Berlin on 15-17 November.

Find out more: https://themerckcrystalpavilion.worldarchitecturefestival.com/