London Festival of Architecture | Hackney Wick: Free Spaces in Desirable Places | Tuesday, June 15, 19:00-20:30 (BST)

Hackney Wick is changing fast. Is it ‘the new Shoreditch’? What does that mean and why should we care? Who controls the story as the post-Olympic new-builds radically change the face of what was once the biggest artist colony in Europe? Where does its industrial past fit in? Is the culture and heritage of this unique location valued, or instrumentalised to drive property development? Why might we all have an interest in how this pans out?

As we emerge from a period of intense isolation, what is the role of cultural and informal spaces in our re-socialisation process and what’s its place in the new Hackney Wick? Why do these liminal areas matter and why are they disappearing?

Writer/guide Simon Cole (Hackney Tours) has been documenting the changes for a decade and been involved with local community activism. Echoing Anna Minton, he asks us to consider who the new ‘quarter’ is for? The past is uncertain, so what’s its future here?

Maja Jović is a lecturer in Architecture & Cities at Westminster University who looks at places of conflict and explores how we construct placemaking and memorial narratives. She juxtaposes the built environment with notions of national identity to explore their connection with elements like branding and power dynamics.

Together yet apart, they will lead a socially distanced group walk/conversation, drawing on pre-recorded content that will be sent to attendees ahead of the event. Bring your curiosity, an open mind – and your own thoughts.

After this one-hour walking conversation (all wheelchair accessible) we will then sit down for a 30 minute discussion (location TBC, Covid-dependent) where you will be invited to reflect on what we’ve seen and heard, or just to listen to the debate. To care, we have to be able to appreciate just why these spaces matter so much.

To book tickets and for more details please go here.

Marylebone Guided Walk and Talk on 23rd June, 5pm-8pm

In autumn 2017 the Survey of London will publish two volumes on the history of Marylebone’s buildings and places, focussing on the south-eastern parts of the historic parish, the area between Oxford Street and the Marylebone Road.

The study has made extensive use of the archives of the Howard de Walden Estate. It also explores the area’s long established relationship with the medical profession and hospitals, and includes accounts of the development of Harley Street and the vast but recently demolished Middlesex Hospital. Alongside this, the clothing industry and motor trade around Great Portland Street receive close attention, as do artists’ communities between Tottenham Court Road and Great Portland Street during the 18th and 19th centuries.

Join us for a talk given by the Survey of London at the University of Westminster Marylebone campus, home to the School of Architecture, and within the Survey’s study area.

The talk will be followed by a tour of the campus building, the site of the former St Marylebone Workhouse from 1775 to 1965, when it was replaced by the current Brutalist tour-de-force by the London County Council architects. This will be followed by a guided walk of the Marylebone study area to look at key sites and buildings that tell the story of the area’s rich history.

The event is free, but please register here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/marylebone-guided-walk-and-talk-tickets-35180683371