Rhiain Bower wins RIBA President’s Dissertation Medal 2017

Congratulations to Rhiain Bower, our MArch student who won the RIBA President’s Dissertation Medal 2017 for her thesis ‘Baricsio: The Slate Quarrymen’s Barracks in North West Wales’.

Tutored by Professor Harry Charrington, Rhiain used a combination of fieldwork, archival data, newspaper clippings, poetry and local accounts, to write a compelling study of the 19th-century barrack dwellings constructed for workers at a slate quarry in Wales. You can see parts of Rhiain’s dissertation here.

‘The remote architecture was not particularly well-documented at the time, so Bower combined her own visual documentation with accounts gleaned from the time to draw a portrait of the harsh conditions experienced by the quarrymen who lived in the stark barracks from week to week for the opportunity of a salary.’

This is the fourth year in a row that a student from the Department of Architecture of the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment has won an award in the RIBA President’s Medals. An outstanding achievement!

Congrats to Arthur Mamou-Mani one of RIBA J Rising Stars 2017!

Congratulations to Arthur Mamou-Mani, the director of Mamou-Mani Architects and an MArch DS10 tutor who has been selected as one of the RIBA Journal‘s Rising Stars 2017!

The winning Cohort 2017 has been selected from 16 shortlisted architects, all of whom have qualified professionally within the last 10 years.

This year’s award includes many young practices as well as architects who moved into project management, diversified into digital fabrication or took up charity work. While no one would advocate another financial crisis, it is often said that they breed creativity and spur on new thinking. The 2017 Rising Stars cohort is a testament to that. Let’s see where they take it over the next 10 years. (RIBA Journal)

Read more about Arthur and his work here.

DS22 Students Participate in “Here, There, Everywhere” Exhibition _ Opening at P21 Gallery, Tonight 7th November at 6.30pm

Artists, architects, actors, teachers, photographers, film makers and families get together in London and Gaza to inaugurate the exhibition Here, There, Everywhere.

Join us at P21 gallery 6.30 pm today –with a live streaming from Gaza at 7 pm — and get a taste of the work from an adaptation of of Tolstoy’s War and Peace to installations by postgraduate students of architecture from DS22 University of Westminster, to self-build initiatives for reconstruction by Palestine Regeneration Team (PART), the works will reflect on moments of hope to celebrate life.

This is part of a great initiative by Az Theatre to mark 10 years of collaboration with Gaza.

Event Curator: Jonathan Chadwick

When: 7th November 6.30pm

Where: PS21 gallery, 21-27 Chalton Street, London NW1 1JD

Read more here.

DS22 Student Anna Malicka Wins RIBA Wren Insurance Association Scholarship

DS22 student Anna Malicka was one of five outstanding MArch students to receive this year’s RIBA and the Wren Insurance Association award.

Congratulations!

The partnership between the RIBA and the Wren Insurance Association was established in 2013 to reward excellence in architectural education and support outstanding students as they embark on a career in architecture.

Five scholarships are awarded each year to outstanding Part 2 students who show excellent promise and drive to expand their horizons within architecture.

The £5,000 awarded to each recipient may be used in a variety of ways, from elaborating on an existing research interest to looking at how they might develop new ideas, or enabling time to scope different mechanisms and philosophies.

Read more: https://www.architecture.com/knowledge-and-resources/knowledge-landing-page/the-wren-insurance-scholars#

OPEN2017: The Future of Architecture _ Part 2/2

Hello and welcome to Part 2 of our report on OPEN2017.

Here we bring you some of the MArch RIBA Part II, Interior Design (BA Hons) and Architectural Technology (BSc Hons) students’ work, which had been on show in our Marylebone studios from June 15th until July 2nd.

 

MArch RIBA Part II

The MArch programme is underpinned by critical agendas, which through its studio culture, are explored as speculative realities. […] The evolving nature of the city, environmental intervention, digital craft, cinematic investigations of space, chance operations, spaces of conflict, industrial regeneration – these are just some of the themes explored by staff and students. (Darren Deane, Course Leader, OPEN2017 Catalogue)

 

DS10 lead by Toby Burgess and Arthur Mamou-Mani believes that architecture should be fun and is obsessed with giving the students an opportunity to build their own projects in the real world. The studio is focused is on physical experiments tested with digital tools for analysis, formal generation and fabrication. This year, students worked on three different briefs: From Symbols to Systems: Pavilion Proposal, Pavilion Construction and The Big Plan. The three briefs are 3 steps towards a creation of a pavilion for Burning Man 2017. This year’s field trip was to the utopian city of Auroville and the many temples of Hampi Valley.

 

DS11 lead by Andrew Peckham, Dusan Decermic and Elantha Evans, had chosen Budapest as the location and focus of their studio projects this year. This choice was directly related to an initial interest in the constitution of twin cities, where twinning as a theme might be understood at different scales: from a transnational context to that of the city itself, its urban districts and interiors. The studio developed three short study project themes, however the main Year One design project was Reconfiguring the Baths, and the Year Two design thesis associated with Architectures of Stasis and Flux. Both were introduced before the visiting Budapest and conducting a city survey.

 

DS12 lead by Ben Stringer, Peter Barber and Maria Kramer, focused on imagining and designing densely populated and ‘publicly owned’ city island villages in the Thames Estuary, a project that intersects issues of housing, industry, ecology and environment. A key issues that studio deals with is a severe shortage of housing in London and the construction of the Thames Tideway ‘super-sewer’, which will help bring new life to estuary ecology. Both were taken as catalysts for imagining new and better modes of existence and new ways of designing the cities. At the beginning of the second semester students went on a field trip to India, where they visited three big cities: Delhi, Ahmedabad and Mumbai.

 

DS13 lead by Andrew Yau and Andrei Martin operates as an applied think-tank, performing cultural analysis and design research. This year the studio focused on the role, relevance and political agency of architecture in contemporary cultural landscape defined by affect, mood, atmosphere and sensation. This was done through the context of Hong Kong’s urban transformation.

 

DS15 lead by Sean Griffiths, Kester Rattenbury and Ruby Ray Penny studies ‘chance’ as a design method via the transposition into architectural design of the American composer John Cage’s aleatoric techniques for musical composition. The studio’s approach encourages students to divest themselves of existing prejudices, tastes and preconceptions in the development of inventive design processes that challenge the underlying assumption that design is rational, linear and preordained activity predicated on intentionality.

 

 

DS16 lead by Anthony Boulanger, Stuart Piercy and Callum Perry returned from a sabbatical this year to continue to build on an ethos that challenges students to create experimental spatial design project that are informed by a critical response to social, cultural, political and economic contexts with an emphasis on an engagements with materials and an understanding of craft. The year began with an intense 5-week creative collaboration with the ceramics expert Jessie Lee at the Grymsdyke Farm. From there the investigation shifted to Porto, Portugal, which became a base for the main individual design project, where students conceived their own briefs and conducted their research.

 

DS18 lead by Lindsay Bremner and Roberto Botazzi has been participating in the research agenda of Monsoon Assemblages since 2016, a 5-year ERC funded project taking place in three cities in South Asia: Chennai, Dhaka and Delhi. These cities are places where neoliberal development is conspiring with changing monsoon patterns to produce floods, heatwaves, outbreaks of disease or water shortages and making urban life increasingly vulnerable.  In 2016/17 the studio began simulating monsoon rain as a way to develop its programme and aesthetics. The students visited Chennai where they were hosted by the School or Architecture and Planning at Anna University.

 

DS20 lead by Gabby Shawcross and Stephen Harty uses film to design and represent architecture. The aim of the studio is to explore animated relationships between architecture and occupants, simulate moving experiences of space, describe dynamic events and speculate on future scenarios. The year the students looked at motion in architecture and architecture in motion. They made journeys through space (quick direct routes and choreographed spatial sequences) in search of architecture that permits encounter and elicits delight.

 

DS21 lead by Clare Carter, Gill Lambert and Nick Wood is interested in edgelands. Working within a post-industrial landscape, the studio made a proposition for revitalising and re-imagining the town of Doncaster and its former mining colonies. The year began with a forensic study of the land, resulting in richly illustrated mappings, followed by production of artefacts which came as a result of working with the material culture of local communities. The major design project Doncaster Works had students speculating on the idea of a resurgent Doncaster, whether to make a new civic space, repurpose an existing structure or suggest a new industrial infrastructure for the town and its environs.

 

DS22 lead by Nasser Golzari and Yara Sharif aims to create a strong link between the practice, research and academia, so this year the studio continued ‘research by design’ journey across ‘absent’ and uncertain landscapes where time and mobility have become irrelevant. Looking at the Mediterranean sea as a prototype for hyper-connected and enduringly fragile world of present, leading to the edges of the Red Sea, Dead Sea and Persian gulf, the students tried to unpack the and expose the hidden layers and dynamic potential of coastal cities.

 

Light and Flight is a collaborative project between DS22, Palestine Regeneration Team (PART) and Golzari-NG Architects, in collaboration with Amos Trust. Exhibited at the OPEN2017, the project was also part of London Festival of Architecture (LFA). The installation celebrates notion of memory – this year’s theme at the LFA.

 

Interior Architecture (BA Hons)

Interior architecture is a distinct context-based practice concerned with re-reading, re-using and altering an architectural shell. Whether at the scale of the city, a building, or a room, the ‘interiorist’ always starts with something and within something. By altering those structures, Interior Architecture allows a building to have many different lives. London is our campus and projects this year included study spaces in the Victoria and Albert Museum, installations at Wilton’s Music Hall, live-work dwellings on Columbia Road and a broadcasting facility in Unity House, Woolwich. (Ro Spankie, Course Leader, OPEN2017 Catalogue)

 

Year 1: lead by Lara Rettondini (Module Leader), Sue Phillips, Yota Adilenidou, Allan Sylvester, Matt Haycocks

In the first year, students on the BA Interior Architecture course are introduced to underlying concepts and principles associated with the discipline and learn fundamental processes, skills and techniques relevant to conceive and develop, resolve and communicate spatial design proposals. They are also get to grips with the use of graphic design, CAD and 3D modelling software, as well as the Faculty’s Fabrication Lab. The projects undertaken over the course of the first year range from short-term tasks in semester one, followed by a study space design for researcher-in-residence at the Victoria and Albert Museum, to the interior design of a small building in semester two.

 

Year 2: lead by Matt Haycocks, Mike Guy, Mohamad Hafeda, Tania Lopez Winkler, Alessandro Ayuso (semester one includes: Julia Dwyer, Diony Kypraiou, Ro Spankie) 

This year the students were asked to look at two very different buildings: Wilton’s (a Victorian music hall in London’s East End) and Unity House (a marine engineering workshop on the banks of the Thames in Woolwich). Both studio projects were focused on the role of the existing building fabric in the process of regeneration, but also the role politics and the place play in interpreting the present and imagining the future. In semester one the students joint the third year students to work on the ideas related to domesticity and home, then worked on design proposals for the temporary inhabitation of Wilton’s Music Hall and finally in semester two they devised their own proposals for the adaptation and reuse of Unity House.

 

Year 3: lead by Ro Spankie, Alessandro Ayuso, Diony Kypraiou, Matt Haycocks (semester one includes: Julia Dwyer, Mike Guy, Mohamad Hafeda, Tania Lopez Winkler)

Third year students started this academic year working together with second year students on a joint project Home Acts. The aim was to explore an idea of home constructed through acts and rituals, rather than brick and mortar. Their own experience of home was then rehoused to a public realm, culminating into an installation and/or performance at Wilton’s Music Hall. The final Major Project in BA Architecture is self derived with students selecting their site and setting their programme.

 

Architectural Technology (BSc Hons)

Architectural Technology offers specialism in the technological, environmental, material and detailing decisions necessary to solve design problems. It requires sound understanding of design process, design and architectural composition, construction technology, and management tools for the effective communication of design information. (Virgina Rammou, Course Leader, OPEN2017 Catalogue)

This year, the second year students were asked to design a nursery school for 85 children and the third year students a new building for White Cube Galleries.

Year 2: lead by Adam Thwaites, Paul Kalkhoven, Tabatha Harris Mills, Virginia Rammou

Year 3: lead by Adam Thwaites, Paul Smith, Tabatha Harris Mills, Virginia Rammou

 

Make sure you like and follow our Instagram and Twitter pages, as we plan to reflect back on the OPEN2017 throughout the month of July.

Happy summer everyone!

MArch Students Help Curate an Exhibition in Support of Architects Benevolent Society

Last Wednesday, 7th of June, an art show called “Let Us Take You by the Hand”, organised in support of the Architects Benevolent Society , was opened at Brady Mallalieu Architects.

Curated by Nouha Hansen and Crista Popescu, our MArch students who also run Westminster Architecture Society, the exhibition features over 40 pieces from both beneficiaries of the Architects Benevolent Society, as well as its valued supporters.

We asked Crista and Nouha to tell us a few words about this project and their curating experience.

OSW: Hi Crista and Nouha! Could you tell us a bit more about how you got involved in this project?

Crista: Two years ago, in my final year of bachelor’s degree, I saw an AJ article about the Architects Benevolent Society and their call for volunteers. At the time, it was a casual conversation between a few of us in the studio that if we move to London we should help. When I eventually did move, I contacted ABS and went to meet them. They’re lovely people, a pleasure to work with, and the work they do is admirable! Nouha joined me not long after and we’re hoping we could make more students aware of their existence. They’ve been around since 1850 and they exist to help architects and their families, so for us it is a worthy cause to support.

OSW: Was this the first time you’ve curated an exhibition, and how was that experience for you?

Nouha: We are currently working on OPEN2017 with our studios. We both have earlier curated end of year shows, which was a comparable experience. The Westminster Architecture Society has also previously curated an ‘open source’ field trip exhibition with photos from the 3rd year trip to Venice.

This time is was a matter of working in a smaller team, just the two of us on the design and delivery aspect, but with the support of the ABS team. It was interesting to see the concept evolve gradually as we received more and more contributions, even last minute. We wanted to showcase the memories of London the artists and beneficiaries shared with ABS in the best way possible, as it felt very personal.  Personally, sharing in their memories and thoughts has given me a stronger relation to London.

OSW: How did you go about choosing the architects/artwork for the exhibition?

Crista: The exhibition features art work from both beneficiaries and supporters of the charity. One of the aims of the event is to promote the charity to more people in the profession, so we thought launching open calls and acting as ambassadors ourselves would achieve this. ABS launched an open call in March, and they thankfully received many lovely contributions from past and present beneficiaries. We also asked a few of our friends if they would like to contribute, as we were keen for the event to reach students/recent graduates as well. However, our warmest thanks for her support go towards the ABS President, Angela Brady, who was an excellent ambassador for the charity and her open call towards her network attracted significant support. She even contributed herself to the exhibition with two stunning glass pieces.

Once we had everything we decided on showing most of the artwork received as they are truly wonderful, and to us not just pictures, but little snapshots of someone’s life. All other memories were collected into dedicated presentation boards. For example, one of the beneficiaries, John Rae, wrote us a lengthy letter recalling the Festival of Britain in 1951, working with Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew, and having water fights with Cedric Price – it was only fitting for us to try and share these stories in more detail on the boards.

OSW: Do you have a favourite piece in the exhibition?

Nouha: It is so difficult to choose one favourite as the contributers’ styles, scenes and memories are all unique tellings about specific experiences in the lives. I feel like I connect with each piece in a different way!

Crista: I agree with Nouha! It was lovely to get to know each piece and each artist’s story, and it makes it difficult to choose! A few that pop to mind? This lovely collage of Leighton house made from leftover lace and ribbons from the beneficiary’s two daughters since they were little, Chris Wilkinson telling us about the gas holders at King’s Cross, or a photo collage by Andrew Carr of his son coming down the stairs in their family home.

OSW: Are there any upcoming projects of a similar kind that you’re working on?

Nouha: For now, the focus is on OPEN2017, which we hope will be a succesfull and enjoyable event for everyone.

Crista: We will continue to be involved in the Westminster Architecture Society and Architects Benevolent Society, and it’s likely that we will organise other types of events. In April, ABS launched AnxietyArch, so we’re planning a separate release for students at the start of the next term. We also would like to continue organising the lecture and symposium series through WAS next year. I’ll just take this opportunity to also invite more students to get involved, either in WAS or ABS. It’s a rewarding process and it enriches one’s university experience !

PS: Thank you again to the wonderful team at ABS for their support and collaboration, and a special thank you to Angela, Reema, Mark, and Katie!

The works come from across the architectural community, including Chris Wilkinson, Jane Duncan, Cristophe Egret, Angela Brady, Yvonne Farrell, Sir Andrew Derbyshire. The artists kindly donated their work to the charity and it’s now on auction on the following web-site:

http://absnet.org.uk/support-us/get-involved/events/let-us-take-you-hand/art-auction

Each piece is unique, created for the occasion, and they’re all accompanied by a short story/memory from the artists themselves, recalling personal experiences or thoughts.

The exhibition is on from 7th until 30th June, opened weekdays from 1pm-6pm, at Brady Mallalieu Architects.

Address: Studio D, 400 Caledonian Rd, London N1 1DN

This exhibition is part of the London Festival of Architecture!! Don’t miss it!

 

Photos: Courtesy of Architects Benevolent Society

 

About Architects Benevolent Society:

In the autumn of 1845 a small group of architects met in the Freemasons’ Tavern on the south side of Great Queen Street, between Lincoln’s Inn Fields and Drury Lane, to consider setting up a fund for the relief of the more unfortunate members of their profession. Since then, the Architects Benevolent Society has been helping helping past and present members of the wider architectural profession, and their families, in times of need.

ABS helps architects, architectural assistants, AT professionals (architectural technologists and technicians) and landscape architects who have worked in the UK – and their families.

Do get in touch: http://absnet.org.uk/do-you-need-help

Cristina Popescu’s project on AJ pin up

An MArch, DS11 student Cristina Popescu‘s proposed water research centre project on Obudai Island in Budapest was featured on AJ pin up.

AJ pin up is the AJ Student Tumblr – gallery of students work aimed at showing “what tomorrow’s architects are working on.”

Browse their gallery: http://architectsjournal.tumblr.com/

OPEN 2017 Catalogue – Showing the Future of Architecture

We are exactly one month away from the OPEN 2017 – the end of year exhibition, which will showcase the work of our BA, MArch, IABA and Architectural Technology students.

Every year, alongside the exhibition, a catalogue of students’ work is published. We spoke to Clare Hamman, the catalogue designer, to tell us what we can expect from this year’s edition.

Same as in previous years, the catalogue is to feature the best of students’ projects and give general insight into the type of work produced at the Faculty of Architecture and Built Environment. Yet, as every architecture student and practicing architect knows, architecture is much more than just a final polished product. To highlight the importance of the design process and offer an understanding of the design trajectory, trials and errors involved, this year each studio section will be supplemented with an additional page, to show the evolution of the work throughout different design stages, from its conception to its realisation.

As a way of expanding the information on studios, a very short biography of tutors, their practices and research interests will also be included in this year’s edition.

For the first time the catalogue will feature work of students from the Designing Cities: Planning and Architecture (BA Hons) course, as well as the projects from the Architectural Technology (BSc Hons) course.

So, please join us for the opening of the exhibition on the 15th June and pick up your own copy of OPEN 2017 catalogue, as, in Clare’s own words, it’s about showing you the future of architecture.

OPEN 2017 is part of the London Festival of Architecture.

Opening night

Thursday 15 June 2016, 6–9pm

Exhibition continues daily for public entry: Friday 16 June – Friday 30 June, 9am–9pm (Sundays 9am–2pm)

Location

University of Westminster
35 Marylebone Road
London NW1 5LS

To view OPEN 2016 catalogue online please go to:

https://issuu.com/clarehamman/docs/open2016-digital