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Meeting With AIA National President, Peter Exley FAIA

Fiona Mckay

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This year’s Keynote Lecture with Tatiana Bilbao brought the current AIA National President, Peter Exley FAIA, to London.  Despite his busy schedule meeting with the RIBA on the day after the lecture, he was able to attend a leisurely breakfast with AIA UK Board Officers and Directors. 

Discussions on a wide variety of topics –  promoting diversity and equity; strategy for COP26 and sustainability; reciprocity; lines of communication with AIA National; and cooperation with other design professionals, etc. – were open and enlightening.  It was heartening to hear that Exley was fully aware that the AIA UK Chapter had maintained its momentum on both events and our policy initiatives throughout the pandemic. 

From left to right: Bea Sennewald AIA, Robert Rhodes AIA, Peter Exley FAIA (National President), Adelina Koleva AIA, Chris Musangi AIA, Mark Breeze AIA, Katharine Storr AIA (President), Lorraine King AIA (Secretary) and Anna Foden Assoc AIA (Vice President).


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MEMBER NEWS / Who Plans Our Events and Conferences? Are You Up for 2022?

Fiona Mckay

Etain Fitzpatrick (on the right) at the Cambridge 2012 City Excursion. Image by: Robert Rhodes AIA, past president.

Etain Fitzpatrick (on the right) at the Cambridge 2012 City Excursion. Image by: Robert Rhodes AIA, past president.

Do you remember when AIA UK used to organise away day Saturday Events and balmy, late summer City Excursions replete with copious Continuing Education credits?  Do you remember when we used to have balmy summers?  It wasn’t – in fact – ALL that long ago…

Etain Fitzpatrick AIA, past UK Chapter President (see HERE), and a fellow guest enjoy a leisurely punting trip during our Cambridge 2012 City Excursion.  We have had plenty of other successful Excursions since then – Bath (2013), Lille (2015), Liverpool (2016), Dublin (2017) and Newcastle (2018) – so why does this feel like a photo from another planet?

Etain – one of the Chapter’s premier event planners (See Dublin HERE) - was finalising plans for a  2020 City Excursion to Cork when the Covid pandemic put paid to international travel.  She would like to have resurrected the Excursion for 2021, but it was a forlorn hope.  Still – Etain expects a future convenient date to be found for what looks like one of the best City Excursions ever.  Such events will happen eventually as assuredly as the sun will shine again … just don’t hold your breath too long.

In the meantime, Etain is currently co-chairing the PLANNING COMMITTEE FOR THE 2022 AIA UK / LONDON CONFERENCE, being co-sponsored by the International Region and the Continental Europe Chapter.  This major event – for which well over a hundred international architects are expected to attend – is in its early planning stages.  Active proposals for  2 of the 3 conference days already promise exciting opportunities, but there are still plenty lectures, tours, etc., to initiate as well as the essential venues, menus, graphics, maps, pre/post conference events, etc., to organise. 

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Etain’s fellow PLANNING COMMITTEE co-chair is Wade Scaramucci AIA, Director at AHMM (see HERE), Wade Scaramucci – Directors – People – Allford Hall Monaghan Morris | AHMM who re-joined the AIA UK Board in 2021 after several years of separation.  One of his principal achievements in his earlier tenure was establishing the original format for the Chapter’s continuing, ever successful building tours.  His recent design projects at Hawley Wharf and Hawley School will provide a dramatic backdrop for 1 of the conference days.  

Etain and Wade are supported by other UK and CE Chapter members on the PLANNING COMMITTEE who bring a wealth of event organisation experience to the team. 

The answer to our title question ‘Who is Up for 2022?’ is of course – ‘Any volunteer who wants to help’. To pull off such a major event, the Chapter Board needs help with ideas, feedback, advice, and organizational skills.  It is hard work, but it can be fun, and it offers a golden opportunity to contribute to a successful Conference. 

Any AIA UK member can volunteer to join the Committee.  Just contact secretary@aiauk.org and we will get back to you.

Written by: Lorraine King, AIA 

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Summer Gala – The Soiree in the Jungle!

Fiona Mckay

After cancelling the 2020 event, the AIA UK was excited to host its first in-person event in over 12 months.  The 2021 Summer Gala took place on the evening of the 10th of September!  Our Soiree in the Jungle was held at the wonderful London Zoo in Regents Park.  Attendance exceeded expectations with many guests indicating this was the first in-person event they had attended in a long time.

The historic Mappin Pavilion, located in the Zoo grounds, was a perfect venue for a pleasant late-summer evening gathering.  The outside deck overlooked the Zoo’s Outback enclosure that contained a number of wallabies and emus.  Hopefully, our festivities did not disturb them too much.  Our “animal experience” was further enhanced when a zookeeper brought a young owl to the party! 

In addition to the usual comradery, the highlight of the evening was our much anticipated raffle sponsored by Herman Miller, HAY, and Colebrook Boson Saunders.  This year Herman Miller donated not one, but three chairs for the raffle!  And a number of other great prizes were donated by HAY and CBS.  Our lucky (and worthy) winners were Lester Korzilius, FAIA winning a unique new model Aeron Chair, Daniella Marshall from ID:SR winning a COSM mid back chair, and Fatos Peja, AIA winning a COSM low back chair.  A special thank you to Shazia Sheikh from Herman Miller for organizing such fantastic prizes and congratulations to all of the winners!

A number of the 2021 AIA UK Excellence in Design Awards winners were in attendance.  During the evening they were honoured with the presentation of their award certificates.

The food was tasty and plentiful, and the drinks kept flowing while guests were entertained throughout the evening with live music and singing provided by Ollie Atkins.  

All too soon the evening was over, and the last guests departed for home at 11 pm.  No doubt, a great relief to the wallabies and emus!  Thank you to all those who attended and thank you to Herman Miller for their support of the Gala and continuing support of the AIA UK.  We are all looking forward to next year’s Gala and we hope to see you at an AIA UK event soon!

Written by: Michael Lischer, FAIA

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AIA BIKE TOUR / Exploring Peckham & South London

Fiona Mckay

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Last year’s Bike Tour on 12 Sep 20 was the first face-to-face AIA UK Event after 6 months of the 1st Covid-19 lockdown.  Addressing the uncertainty of the times, the Newsletter tour follow-up included the note: ‘we still do not know at the time of writing whether this bike trip was a brief interlude in the world of social distancing or a foretaste of normality’s return’.  

Unfortunately, it proved to be a brief interlude… It took a 2nd lockdown and a full year’s wait until  AIA members would meet up again first at the 10 Sep 21 Summer Gala and then on the 18 Sep 21 Bike Tour.  After those further 12 months of Zoom meetings, gusts of fresh air were finally in the offing.  

Unlike those of previous years, the 2021 Bike Tour included an in-depth review of one location and one architect’s work before venturing off to explore South London’s architectural heritage. 

Ben O’Looney is known to AIA members as the guide to past bike and walking tours; as an architectural lecturer for New York University’s London programme; and as leader of  architectural River Tours for Open City.  However, he is also a practicing architect, with a busy office in Peckham.  That location is important because O’Looney is pre-eminently a community architect –  the kind who is greeted by local clients and friends as he walks along the streets, who designs local shop signs as a favour, who delights in local diversity, who immerses himself in local architectural history…   

The highlight of this year’s tour was a comprehensive visit to the Peckham Rye Victorian train station (C H Driver FRIBA/1866), currently undergoing the initial stages of serious preservation work under O’Looney’s guidance.  As he opened the ornately railed stairwell wing to the station’s otherwise inaccessible waiting-room-cum-ballroom, an assortment of station users asked to join our mini ‘tour’.  Station preservation works – in addition to the recently approved (and much needed) renovation of the working parts and the removal/replacement of semi derelict, surrounding buildings – has generated wide public interest.

With our bikes safely tucked away for the duration, and accompanied throughout the technical discussions by one willing local resident who recorded our session, we were treated to a tour and an enthusiastic critique of all aspects of the Station’s revival – including, inter alia (!) - local material sourcing; colour selection; insulation solutions; access limitations; replication v conservation dilemmas; brick cleaning, structural analyses; commercial concessions…  the whole gamut of project details. 

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A short tour of other O’Looney projects down the currently (but unfortunately only temporarily) pedestrianised Rye Lane followed the Station visit, including renovations to a 1930s retail façade at the former Holdrons Department Store (T P Bennett/1935); a new build residential/retail unit; various shop front interventions; and a mosque addition.  There was insufficient time for further O’Looney locations in the area (see HERE).

After a brief visit to the popular Peckham Festival at the Bussey Buildings - former industrial buildings saved from demolition in 2009 via a local campaign and now an increasingly popular destination for the young and trendy  – bike touring started in earnest, with a leisurely meander from Peckham via Goose Green to Dulwich, Forest Hill and then – for the more intrepid only – to Bromley. 

Scattered among residential and all too busy South London streets there was a catalogue of architectural projects to wonder at – the local prize winning Bellenden Primary School and Nursery (Cottrell & Vermulen/2019); a modern housing development (Tikari Works/c2020); a modern church (HOK); the Victorian East Dulwich Hospital (H Jarvis & Sons/c1885); clapboarded, vernacular houses; an unusual Victorian all concrete house; the Victorian masterpiece of Dulwich College (C Barry Jr) alongside a modern teaching laboratory (Grimshaw); and the Royal Bell Hotel in Bromley (E Newton RA /1989).  

The belated – we were behind schedule by at least 2 hours – picnic lunch was held in the grounds of the Dulwich Gallery, where the local staff allowed us a brief look-in to Soane’s 1810 Georgian masterpiece, its  fantastic art collection and unusual mausoleum – with American architect, Rick Mather’s, 2000 café addition nearby.

The final push – literally for some of us (there is a rather steep hill along the South Circular Road) – took us to the Horniman Museum (C H Townsend/c1890s) with its spectacular trio of Art Nouveaux, Arts and Craft and modern (Allies & Morrison) façades and its equally spectacular views of London.  A long day, but an eye opener.  London’s diverse architectural heritage never ceases to amaze…

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Follow the route via the ‘Slide Show’.  Pictures contributed by the AIA Chapter Board member participants, including - Etain Fitzpatrick AIA, Lorraine King AIA, Maria Loring AIA, Joerg Matthaei, Alex Miller AIA and assorted guests.  Look out for the surprise guest appearance of past UK Chapter President, Robert Rhodes AIA, and family. 

Written by Lorraine King, AIA








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AIA UK Sustainability Talks 2021

Fiona Mckay

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The severity of the Climate Crisis is becoming ever clearer, with the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report released on 9th August 2021 laying out the stark reality that climate change is widespread, rapid, and intensifying.  With buildings responsible for around 40 percent of all carbon emissions (and a lot of other environmentally damaging effects and emissions as well), our role as architects is significant, and our design decisions will be highly impactful for generations to come.  To help our members better understand sustainability issues, best practices, and innovative approaches, the AIA UK Chapter created a dedicated Sustainability Initiative in 2019.  This year, with the November UN Climate Change Conference CoP26 in Glasgow rapidly approaching, we have continued these activities online, reaching a wider and broader audience than ever before with our greatest range of speakers yet. In summary:

We kicked-off the year with the story behind the design and construction of the award-winning Cork House – in Windsor, shared by CSK Architects (as part of our ongoing virtual Building Tours series).

Kelly Doran, of MASS, then shared his personal research and work on 'Climate Positive Design', highlighting the challenges of the current normative design, specifying, procurement systems and incentives, as well as the need for a different and more thoughtful approach so we can design, specify, and build carbon positive architecture.

In April we collaborated with the AIA International Region to create their ‘Implementing Change’ Spring Conference to draw attention to international issues, approaches, and challenges around making meaningful change in how we design and build more sustainably. We hosted three of the key events, including the keynote lecture and discussion with Ed Mazria of Architecture 2030, who laid out the facts and figures of where we are, where we need to be, and a possible path for how to get there, in his talk ‘Architecture of the Earth, Not Just On It’.

In May we were joined by Sustainability Consultant Lucy Townsend of BDP, to talk us through 'Navigating a Pathway to Net Zero', highlighting the policy landscape, problematic approaches and definitions, and the exciting opportunities for us to reach this goal. 

In July Patrick Bellew, Co-Founder of Atelier Ten, built on these discussions as he questioned ‘Sustainability and the Road to Net Zero?’ by talking us through the details of some of his firm’s innovative projects across Europe, North America, and Asia.

In October we will continue these discussions with Raphael Lafargue from Transsolar.

Throughout the year we have been working closely with Architecture 2030 to push for meaningful action at CoP26 in November.   As part of this process, we were a foundational signatory to the CoP26 Communiqué.  We continue to work with AIA National as we approach the November conference - stay tuned for updates!  

If there are any speakers, events, or particular discussions you would like us to host, please get in touch at sustainability@aiauk.org.

Written by: Mark Breeze, AIA 

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AIAUK 2021 Excellence in Design Awards

Fiona Mckay

The AIAUK’s Excellence in Design Awards were held virtually on the 30th of June, thanks to our generous sponsor Portview.  Despite the complex year we’ve all experienced, it was encouraging to see so many high-quality entries.  It is true testament to the enduring nature of our profession.  The awards were judged based on their design achievements, design intentions, distinguishing aspects of the design resolution, and sustainability, which focussed on the AIA Ten Measures of Design Excellence.

Our thanks go out to our jury panel, which included:

  • Katharine Storr, AIA UK President

  • Jane Duncan OBE, Architect, Jane Duncan Architects + Interiors

  • Wesam Al Asali, Architect and Researcher, University of Cambridge and IWlab

  • Kiru Balson, Senior Sustainability Consultant, Max Fordham

  • Hattie Hartman, Editor and Qualified Architect, Architects Journal

  • Mouzhan Majidi, FAIA, RIBA, Architect, Chief Executive at Zaha Hadid Architects

  • Paul Scullion, Director at Portview

The 2021 awards were chosen from three overarching categories: Professional, Emerging Practice and Sustainability.  Within these categories the jurors chose winners across a diverse range of scales and sectors.

The Winners

A huge congratulations to our winners and special commendations.  The full video of the night’s winners can be found here.

EMERGING PRACTICE

Winner: Red Hill Barn, TYPE Studio

Photo Credit: Rory Gardiner

Photo Credit: Rory Gardiner

PROFESSIONAL

Small Projects – Winner:Quarry Studio, Moxon Architects

Photo Credit: Tim Soar

Photo Credit: Tim Soar

Small Projects - Special Commendation: Freeholders, Mole Architects

Photo Credit: Nick Guttridge

Photo Credit: Nick Guttridge

Medium Projects – Winner: Magdalene College Library, Niall McLaughlin Architects

Photo Credit: Nick Cane

Photo Credit: Nick Cane

Medium Projects - Special Commendation: ESTEAM Centre, Somerset College, Walters & Cohen Architects with 2AD Space Architects

Photo Credit: Somerset College André Engelbrecht

Photo Credit: Somerset College André Engelbrecht

Large Projects – Winner: 100 Liverpool Street, Hopkins Architects

Photo Credit: Charles Hosea

Photo Credit: Charles Hosea

EXEMPLARY PERFORMANCE IN SUSTAINABILITY

Winner:1 Finsbury Avenue, Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

Photo Credit: Timothy Soar

Photo Credit: Timothy Soar

Written by Anna Foden, Assoc. AIA

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