Lindsay Bremner wins new British Academy Research Grant

Lindsay Bremner and an interdisciplinary and intersectoral team of researchers from India, the UK and Canada have been awarded a British Council Knowledge Frontiers: International interdisciplinary Research 2022 grant for a two-year project titled ‘Reimagining the Good City from Ennore Creek, Chennai.’

Ennore Creek is a coastal wetland and backwater of the Kosasthalaiyar River in north Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. Rich with mangroves, salt flats, canals and the myriad life-forms that thrive in them, it is home to numerous fishing communities and serves as a buffer against floods and sea level rise. After the 1950s, when Chennai began associating the idea of the ‘Good City’ with industrialisation and modernisation, Ennore was rezoned for heavy polluting industries. Land-use changes and lax environmental controls resulted in pollution, coal ash leakage and dumping of toxic material into the creek, degrading its ecosystem and impacting the health and livelihoods of its communities. This project will bring together diverse communities of knowledge and practice to reimagine and rearticulate the future of the creek in the interests of local communities, in the context of permanent weather extremes, climate challenges and a state-led creek eco-restoration proposal.

Co-investigators on the project, which will run from April 2022 – April 2024 are historians Dr Bhavani Ramesh (University of Toronto), and Dr Aditya Ramesh (University of Manchester); anthropologist Dr Karen Coelho (Madras Institute of Development Studies); environmental chemist Dr Asif Qureshi (Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad); community activist and writer Nityanand Jayaraman and K. Saravan and Pooja Kumar (Coastal Resource Centre, Chennai).

This research is supported/funded by the British Academy’s Knowledge Frontiers: International Interdisciplinary research 2022 Programme.

Featured Image: Ennore Creek with the North Chennai Thermal Power Station in the background by Shafeeq Ahamed S, Age 17, 2022.

Landscape Citizenship Symposium, Friday 16th of November, 09:00 – 17:00, Conway Hall, WC1R 4RL

When: Friday, 16th of November 2018, 09:00 – 17:00

Where: Conway Hall, 25 Red Lion Square, London, WC1R 4RL

Landscape Citizenships: Grounded in the discourses of ecological, watershed, and bioregional citizenships, this symposium seeks to evaluate belonging through the idea of landscape as landship. This describes substantive, mutually constitutive relations between people and place. The emerging fields of landscape justice and landscape democracy form a background against which to examine issues from folkways to the virtual, migration and inhabitation, nationalism, and speculative futures.

The symposium is being organised by Tim Waterman, Ed Wall and Jane Wolff. It is supported by the University of Greenwich, University of Toronto, Centre for Landscape Democracy (NMBU) and the Landscape Research Group.

For more information and bookings please go to: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/landscape-citizenships-symposium-tickets-49041312887

Alumni Lecture Series: Stirling Prize Winner and Alumnus Michael Wilford “What It Takes To Produce Meaningful Architecture”, Monday 19th March, Robin Evans Room M416, 18:00

When: Monday 19th March, 6pm

Where: Robin Evans Room [M416], Marylebone Campus, University of Westminster

Free drinks after, as always!

Stirling prize winner and alumnus Michael Wilford will be the last guest in our popular Alumni Lecture Series!

Composition and character are primary aspects of the art of architecture. To demonstrate how these aspects have influenced and supported both finished buildings and competition designs, renowned architect Michael Wilford will describe his architectural objectives and the strategies he uses to achieve them.

There will be time for the audience to ask questions of the speakers both during the Q&A and informally after the event with refreshments and networking.

RSVP: https://your.westminster.ac.uk/form/what-it-takes-to-produce-meaningful-architecture

MICHAEL WILFORD CBE, MICHAEL WILFORD ARCHITECTS

Michael Wilford is an architect of international renown, having won multiple international prizes, including the Stirling prize for the Lowry Building in Salford. For 35 years he was principal in an architectural practice based in London with satellite offices in Berlin and Stuttgart, Germany. He was in partnership with James Stirling for 21 years.

He teaches extensively in schools of architecture including posts at Yale, Harvard, Rice, the University of Cincinnati in USA, the University of Toronto, McGill University Montreal in Canada, University of Newcastle, Australia, the Architectural Association, and the University of Sheffield, England. He is currently Visiting Professor at Liverpool University School of Architecture. His work is published internationally and the subject of numerous exhibitions, films, TV and radio programmes. In 2001 he was awarded a CBE for services to architecture.