“Mies & Stirling: Contemporary Reflections” at the RIBA, 21st March, 19:00

Shumi Bose, writer and academic, who teaches the M.Arch History and Theory module and runs Dissertation Group I: Design of the Deal at the University of Westminster will chair a panel discussion Mies&Stirling: Contemporary Reflections on the 21st March, 19:00, at the Royal Institute of British Architects.

The key figures involved in two of the most significant schemes of the 20th century in London will have an opportunity to give their account of the history of Mansion House Square and recently listed Number One Poultry. Panel members are Lord Peter Palumbo, architectural patron and commissioner of the Mansion House Square and Number One Poultry; Laurence Bain, project architect of Number One Poultry; Adrian Gale, liaison architect for Mansion House Square scheme; Gavin Stamp, architectural historian; and MJ Long, employee of James Stirling.

This event is part of the exhibition ‘Mies van der Rohe & James Stirling: Circling the Square’.

More information: https://www.architecture.com/WhatsOn/March2017/MiesStirlingContemporaryReflections.aspx

 

 

WAS Open Lecture: “James Stirling: Inspiring Places and Spaces” by Alan Berman, 3rd April,13:00, M416

The Westminster Architecture Society is pleased to announce the last Open Lecture of the term. James Stirling: Inspiring Places and Spaces will complement the month-long events held by the RIBA to honour Stirling’s contribution to modern architecture in anticipation of the eponymous annual Stirling Prize.

The lecture will take place on 3rd April, 13:00 in Robin Evans Room (M416), Marylebone Campus, University of Westminster.

Alan Berman is founder of Berman Guedes Stretton Architects and also works at Studio Berman. Alan gives the architecture lecture series at Wolfson College, University of Oxford, and is a lecturer at University of Liverpool. He edited Jim Stirling and the Red Trilogy: Three Radical Buildings and Stirling+Wilford American Buildings.

 

M.Arch History and Theory Open Lecture: Teresa Stoppani, 16th March, 18:30, M416

The series of lectures organised by the M.Arch History and Theory continues on Thursday 16th March at 18:30 in Robin Evans Room (M416), Marylebone Campus with Professor Teresa Stoppani’s Architecture & Paradigm.

‘Paradigm’ (Gr. paradèigma, ‘example, exemplar’) is an action and relation word that contains within itself the possibility of variation and movement; it indicates oscillation and multiplicity rather than fixity and one-ness.  As an intellectual operation the paradigm defines a distance of the object from itself, removing the object from its singularity to then return it to another singularity.  It also enables a distancing from acquired historical, morphological and typological preconceptions and classifications that are well known in architecture and urbanism.  The paradigm as a cultural operation works towards the production of a non-dialectical form of knowledge, which does not aim to achieve the universal and to derive principles (rules) from it.

This lecture argues that the architectural and urban ‘project’, as a cultural construction around its object, performs in the city the relational operation of the paradigm.

Teresa Stoppani is an architect and architectural theorist. She has taught architectural design and theory in Italy, Australia and the UK, and is currently Professor of Architecture at Leeds Beckett University, where she directs the PhD in Architecture programme. Her research interests are the relationship between architecture theory and the design process in the urban environment, and the influence on the specifically architectural of other spatial and critical practices. She is author of Paradigm Islands: Manhattan and Venice (Routledge 2010) and Unorthodox Ways to Rethink Architecture and the City (Routledge 2018) and editor with G. Ponzo and G. Themistokleous of This Thing Called Theory (Routledge 2016).

FAB FEST Launch Party!

On 23rd February 2017 the FabFest team announced the return of the International Fabrication Festival, which will take place at the University of Westminster from 2nd to 10th July 2017.

The theme for this year is Pop-up City and the participants are encouraged to apply as teams rather than individuals. The teams don’t have to be fully formed for the application process, but at this stage each group should have at least 3 members. There is space for 50 pavilions, each to be built by a team of 5-8 students, who will be mentored by a designer from academia or professional practice, so it is possible to apply either as a student or as a mentor. A Digital Fabrication Liaison will be assigned from the Lab staff to help the participants with the use of CNC machines.

FAB FEST timeline:

February: FAB FEST Launch

March: Apply – Form a team, propose a concept for a pavilion, and submit your application

April: Design – Test the materials, and develop a sketch model

May: Design – Design a technical detail and a 1:20 Model

June: Fabricate – Produce working drawings and digitally fabricate your parts using the Lab’s CNC machines

July: Festival – Install your pavilion in Ambika P3, and enjoy the week’s events and parties!

The events will mostly take place at the Marylebone Campus – fABE and Ambika P3, but will also include a London Architecture Tour, an exclusive screening at the Regent Street Cinema and many other treats and surprises. The winners will be announced on 7th and 8th July!

Deadline for applications: 13th March

Find out more: http://fabfest.london/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fabfest.london/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/fabfest.london/

PLAYWeek returns to Marylebone campus and various locations around the city

Play is our brain’s favourite way of learning. (Diane Ackerman)

Following the success of previous year, PLAYWeek 2 was back in November 2016, with more than ten workshops on offer. The play-dates took place on the 16th, 17th and 18th November, on Marylebone campus and various locations around the city.

Judging by the voting results, students were keen on learning new skills, either through the use of new software and technologies, or through more hands-on approach in the FabLab.

An Introduction to Programming Light and Colour, organised by Richard Difford and Jonathon Hodges, offered an opportunity to explore the creative possibilities of Processing and Ardunio with DMX lighting to design and prototype architectural lighting (cover image). The final product was definitely a crucial component which helped lift the mood of the final exhibition, and brought a party vibe to the end of the PLAYWeek.

Digital Traces workshop organised by Stefania Boccaletti and Roberto Bottazzi was an opportunity to delve into the world of Big Data, machines, algorithms and numbers, where the students themselves were being the subjects of investigation. The information stored on students’ hard drives, primarily images, were used as raw material which was mined and eventually visualised with a help of Grasshopper and ImageJ free software. The aim of this two-day workshop was to give students a light and fun introduction to the issues and opportunities engendered by Big Data, not only through the use of software, but also through discussions and presentations.

For those with a penchant for VR, gaming and non-linear immersive experiences, Shot Disco workshop, lead by Gabby Shawcross and Ross Cairns of the design studio The Workers, was an ideal place to learn more about gaming engine Unity. The students were given a chance to produce their own interactive environment with dance floor, dynamic disco lights, smoke and mirrorballs.

The use of different softwares was crucial in Art Forms in Nature workshop, lead by Harry Paticas and Tom Raymont. Inspired by a publication “Art Forms in Nature” by Ernst Haeckel, participants of this workshop were invited to look for patterns of complex order in natural objects, such as shells, bones and seed-cases. Working with 20 unusual natural artefacts and using a 3D scanning, drawing and modelling tools by the end of the PLAYweek students have produced a shared library of digital models and an exquisite drawing each.

Lara Rettondini, Matt Haycocks, Yota Adilenidou, Sue Phillips, Allan Sylvester and FabLab staff joined together to organise the Design of Display / Display of Design / Play at the V&A workshop where students were given an opportunity to work with the V&A Museum as a client, to address an external agenda and specific client requirements. Workshop started on Wednesday at the V&A Museum where students met Johanna Agerman Ross, the Curator of the 20th Century and Contemporary Furniture and Product Design and had a chance to engage with the space in which they were to intervene. Thursday and Friday were studio days where the students worked within three groups on different proposals, which were presented on the last day of the workshop. Due to the complexity and size of the project the group aims to carry on working on it as an extracurricular activity over the coming months.

Those who were eager to get their wellies out way before the festival season went for the Earth Building workshop at the EnvLab. Working with rammed earth, by Friday the participants were very proud of their newly built bench.

Quite a spectacular structure was built and dismantled by the participants of Tensegrity workshop, lead by Geoff Morrow, Gavin Weber, Will McLean, Pete Silver and Scott Batty. Previously showcased at Vision London this lightweight pavilion with a tensegrity ring and tensile fabric membrane was assembled and then taken down at the Pod during this two-day workshop.

Maria Kramer offered students an opportunity to develop their own briefs and projects in her Your Project workshop. Experimenting with different shapes, sizes, materials and lighting, participants were encouraged to try out different solutions and options to strengthen their design ideas.

Some of the activities took place off campus, such as Lantern Walk with Harry Charrington, where the students met at the Blackfriar armed with their sketchbooks, and were taken on a “good walk through our city”.

Elly Ward from Ordinary Architecture gave a private tour of the exhibition “Origins: A project by Ordinary Architecture” on show at the Royal Academy. At the Origin Myths one-day workshop participants were encouraged to embrace their own erroneous theories, misunderstood theories, personal mythologies and speculative wild-goose chases to invent new origins of architecture. Their drawings and models were exhibited and presented at the end of the day.

And while the workshops, walks and tours were underway, an alternative vision of the PLAYWeek was being created by the participants of the Drawing PLAYWeek workshop. Lead by Alessandro Ayuso, Mike Guy and Ro Spankie, this group explored how to depict inhabitation in architectural drawings, and celebrate the inventiveness and liveliness of the students and staff’s inhabitation of the building, by ‘populating’ the drawings.

On Friday evening participants and staff gathered at MG14 to exhibit some of their works and celebrate the end of a productive week.