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Blog

Beale & Company: Reports from the Courts - April 2016

Fiona Mckay

Publication: This article was first published in Construction Law's April edition.

In our regular round up of court decisions, from Andrew Croft (Associate) and Natalie Ledger (Assistant Solicitor) of Beale & Company, examines a cautionary tale of the dangers of giving informal advice as it may create a tortious duty of care; a court ruling on whether a variation can be agreed by email; and a Scottish case where the court was willing to uphold obligations to provide collateral warranties.

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Authors: Andrew Croft and Natalie Ledger

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AIA UK Remembers Dame Zaha Hadid, Honorary AIA

Fiona Mckay

It is with great sadness that we learn of the passing of Zaha Hadid on 31 March 2016. Our relationship with Zaha goes back to the very early days of our Chapter when Zaha was a jurist for our very first Design Excellence Awards, held in 1995.

The UK Chapter granted early recognition for her design talents with a Design Excellence Award (LF One, Landesgar Tensshau, Weil Am Rhein, Germany) in 2001. She then went on to win again in 2006 (Phaeno Science Centre, Wolfsburg, Germany), 2007 (Maggie’s Centre, Fife, UK) and 2011 (Opera House, Guangzhou, China).

Zaha was a good friend of AIA UK and participated in numerous Chapter events over the years, including acting as jurist for the Student Design Charrette in 2000. During this event, she astounded the students by arriving early in the day and actively chastising them for not taking the event – and design in general - seriously enough.

On 27 Sep 2007, on the occasion of the 150th Year celebration of the AIA’s founding – and coincidentally the 15th Anniversary of the AIA UK Chapter – Zaha Hadid Architects was given the President’s Award by then President Kevin Flanagan AIA in recognition of “your office’s contribution in promoting excellence in design; as well as your past contributions of time to the AIA/UK Chapter and the AIA internationally.” She remained an Honorary member of the Chapter until her passing.

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Beale & Company Reports from the Courts - February 2016

Fiona Mckay

In our regular round up of recent court cases of importance to the construction industry, Andrew Croft (Associate) and Simii Sivapalan (Assistant Solicitor) of Beale & Company consider a case highlighting that a limitation clause does not remove liabilities to all parties on a contract; and another where a court considered the late payment provisions of the ‘Construction Act’ where insolvency was a risk.

This article was first published in Construction Law's February edition.

To read the full article, please click on this link.

Authors: Andrew Croft and Simii Sivapalan

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AIA Grassroots Conference, Detroit

Fiona Mckay

The 2016 AIA Grassroots Leadership Conference was held in Detroit, bringing the annual meeting “closer to the action” and highlighting the important work going on in cities across the United States, and especially in Detroit. The conference took place at the famous Renaissance Center, home of General Motors, over the last week of February.

Grassroots is an opportunity for the executive members from chapters around the world to discuss issues, improve leadership skills and enhance their individual chapter’s development through workshops, presentations and education. Typical there is also a legislative component including meeting with Representatives to Congress in DC, but this year they switched things around. Politicians were invited to talk to us about the important role architects play in the development of cities. Architects are critical thinkers and problem solvers, and the issues facing cities today need the creative approach of architects. The role of architects in city planning was explored through a panel discussion between William Bell, mayor of Birmingham and Bob Buckhorn, mayor of Tampa, and the current Planning Director for Detroit, Maurice Cox, FAIA along with several other well-known architects including Mickey Jacob, FAIA.

The conference reached a climax during the final keynote address by the former Governor of Michigan, Jennifer Granholm. She inspired and enlightened attendees to need of every city to hear the voice of architects. As a profession, we do an injustice when we avoid speaking up on matters of city development, growth and planning. As architects, we must look beyond the daily grind of our jobs and see a vision for the future.

Candidates for AIA National positions were given a chance to address the conference in a series of panel discussions. There are a number of members running for Secretary and First Vice President. For more information on the candidates, please contact the AIA UK executive. The election will take place at the 2016 National Convention in Philadelphia. The 43rd annual Grassroots Conference will return to Washington D.C. in 2017.

Author: Frederick Grier AIA

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Foreign Exchange: Overseas Architects Working in Britain

Fiona Mckay

The Twentieth Century Society – C20 Society for short - is an advocacy group that “exists to safeguard the heritage of architecture and design in Britain from 1914 onwards”. Its website also lists its prime objectives as “conservation, to protect the buildings and design that characterise the Twentieth Century in Britain, and education, to extend our knowledge and appreciation of them”.

As the Society’s objective to promote education closely aligns with the AIA’s Continuing Education commitment, the AIA UK Chapter established a link from our website to C20’s to open up their extensive calendar of events in London and other regions of the UK to our membership and to visiting architects.

From our website’s “Links” section there is a direct link not only to C20, but also to other UK groups and societies that offer educational opportunities – the Building Centre, the Royal Society of Arts, the London School of Economics, the Victorian Society, the City Corporation of London and the London Architectural Diary. Additional links could easily be added to this resource if UK Chapter members advise on the benefits.

Unfortunately, Continuing Education credits for such events are only available on a self-reporting basis. Therefore, when a chance run through the C20 events listing discovered a Spring Lecture series that seemed particularly appropriate for our membership -“Foreign Exchange: Overseas Architects Working in Britain” - an effort was made to turn the series into an official AIA UK event so that 1.5 Continuing Education Credits could be earned per lecture.

The C20 Society proved amenable to the idea and the series organiser, Alan Powers - a leading teacher, researcher and prolific writer specialising in architecture and design who has been long associated with the C20 Society - has announced the AIA UK chapter’s sponsorship of the series at the close of each lecture.

4 Feb - National Gallery Sainsbury Wing by Venturi and Scott Brown

Opened in a blaze of publicity and mixed reviews in 1992, the extension of the National Gallery came at the end of a long and tortuous process by which assumptions about style and patronage in architecture were questioned. The lecture was given by Alan Powers, who placed the Sainsbury Wing in a longer story of American buildings in London and the classical revival and Post- Modernist movements of the 1980s.

11 Feb - St Catherine’s College, Oxford by Arne Jacobsen

The selection of a leading Danish architect to design a new Oxford college in 1959 was recognition of the high level of admirations given to Danish architecture and design at the time. Geoffrey Tyack, a Fellow of Oxford University and Director of the Stanford University Programme at Oxford described the selection process and the reception of the college buildings by the public.

18 Feb - New Ways, Northampton by Peter Behrens

The house was commissioned by W.J. Bassett-Lowke in 1925 and is sometimes credited with starting modern architecture in Britain. It was a remarkable and unexpected choice of a major figure from pre-1914 Germany, from a patron who had previously commissioned C. R. Mackintosh’s last major works. The lecture was given by architectural journalist Louise Campbell.

19 Feb – Lutyens in the City of London

Although Lutyens could hardly be described as a foreign architect, the AIA has extended its association with the C20 Society to include this comprehensive survey of his important work in London as the lecture was held in the same timeframe as the Foreign Exchange series. Dr Mervin Miller who gave the lecture not only has 37 years involvement in built environment conservation, but is also a charted architect and town planner.

25 Feb - Gane Pavilion, Bristol by Marcel Breuer

Marcel Breuer said that the two most important buildings in his career were UNESCO in Paris and the small temporary pavilion at the Royal West of England showground, designed in partnership with F.R.S Yorke in 1936. The speaker was Max Gane, the grandson of Crofton Gane whose company manufactured some of Breuer’s furniture and who also commissioned a transformation of his own house in Bristol.

3 Mar - Byker and other work by Ralph Erskine

Ralph Erskine was born and educated in Britain, but remained in Sweden at the outbreak of war in 1939, where he established a thriving practice before receiving several major commissions in Britain from the mid-1960s onwards. The speaker was, Elain Harwood, the senior architectural investigator for Historic England and author of “Space, Hope and Brutalism: English Architecture 1945-1975”. She interviewed Erskine in his last years and was able to put his most famous English project, the Byker Estate in Newcastle, in context with some of his lesser know work.

10 March - Holland House, Bury Street by H. P. Berlage

In 1916, in what was then a narrow street in the City of London, a novel building for a Dutch shipping company was completed to designs by the major Dutch architect, H. P. Berlage. It was then largely ignored for 50 years until the area was opened up by new construction. Herman van Berkeijk of Technical University of Delft explored the background to the commission and its place in Berlage’s career.

The C20 speakers have all been particularly good – always knowledgeable, frequently opinionated, often humorous and generally very willing to be interactive. The C20 Society must be congratulated on the success of its educational initiatives, given that the lectures all drew sizeable audiences of well over 50 attendees, including a majority of non-architects who held a surprising enthusiasm for the subject matter.

AIA UK will take a view on future events to see if the formal sponsorship for them can be initiated in a similar way. In the meantime, members are encouraged to check the website “Links” for other exciting educational opportunities.

Author: Lorraine King AIA

 

 

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AIA UK FILM NIGHT - OLYMPIA : FESTIVAL OF NATIONS | 16 MARCH 2016

Fiona Mckay

This being an Olympic year, we finished the first half of the 2016 Movie series with the screening of ‘Olympia – Festival of Nations’ documentary. This is a historical documentary about the controversial 1936 Olympics, and the very first documentary feature film of the Olympic Games ever made. Many advanced motion picture techniques, which later became industry standards but which were ground-breaking at the time, were employed. The techniques employed are almost universally admired, but the film is controversial due to its political context. The documentary was a slight break from the traditional architecture films we screen, but nevertheless the grand architecture of the Olympic Stadium (Olympiastadion) built for propaganda purposes is clearly visible, as well as the historical context of early Olympics with no sponsors and amateur athletes to name but a few. The Olympiastadion Berlin has gone through some renovations since, and is still in use today.

Many thanks to all those who attended! We look forward to seeing you at our next screening this Autumn when the movie series resumes!

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