We are interested in place and identity. We aspire to an Architecture that is simultaneously of its time and also timelessly embodies the spirit of a site, its Genius Loci. We seek architectural solutions which are grounded in their specific contexts, which are unique and appropriate, and which deal with current social and political issues.
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Tom Hewitt interviewed on BBC Radio Newcastle “Drive Time” show
Tom now hopes to continue exploring walking as a design methodology and to work with clients to apply these methodologies to real-life projects. He said, “I’ve not seen anyone else using walking in this way as such a specific element of the architectural design process, so in that sense this is quite unique.
“During my research into the landscape, the existing developments I encountered were often placeless and homogenous – they didn’t strongly relate to the landscape they were situated in or the history of the area.
“I believe using this walking technique could produce buildings which have a deeper meaning and connection to their place. I’m looking forward to exploring how this can be applied in practice.”
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RIBA President’s Medal Commendation awarded to Tom Hewitt (MArch 2017) at award ceremony on Tuesday, 5 December 2017
We’re thrilled by Tom’s success in the RIBA President’s Medals with his project “Landhaus”. The RIBA received 146 entries in the Silver Medal category from 360 eligible Universities in 75 countries with Tom’s work recognised amongst one of the four best projects.
Tom said, “The support and encouragement I have had during my time as a student at Northumbria has played a huge part in this award. I’ve had the freedom to explore alternative research methodologies and run with ideas that I wouldn’t have had elsewhere.”
RIBA President Ben Derbyshire said: “Many congratulations to this year’s RIBA President’s Medals winners. The entries for this awards programme are always impressive and this year was no exception, with more entries than ever before.
“I am extremely pleased to see that the creativity and accomplished technique in the work of these budding architects is matched with a renewed ambition and focus on the important role that architecture plays in social betterment.”
The 2017 RIBA President’s Medals exhibition is on display at the RIBA in London until Saturday 10 February, and at RIBA North in Liverpool until 24 February 2018.
Tom’s thesis project can be explored further at: https://tomhewittarchitectureworkshop.wordpress.com/
Read more about the President’s Medals here: https://www.archdaily.com/884950/riba-announces-2017-presidents-medals-for-worlds-best-student-projects
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The final lecture for 2017 in the nas Shaping Practice lecture series will be given tonight by Roz Barr Architects.
Roz Barr is a highly respected practitioner with a keen interest in architectural education. Her use of hand-crafted models is integral to her design process, testing ideas through scale and materiality towards the production of her award-winning built projects.
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TONIGHT’S LECTURE POSTPONED UNTIL Thursday, 23 November 2017
nas Shaping Practice #03: Alberto Sanchez, SMS Arquitectos
Based in Palma de Mallorca, SMS Arquitectos’ work responds to the context of the Balearic Isles, while developing international collaborations with practices such as Caruso St John (London), Coll-Leclerc (Barcelona) and Bosshard Vaquer (Zurich). In developing regional responses for civic and residential projects, the office employs imaginative approaches to siting, planning and construction, particularly re-inventing cheap technologies as elements of beauty:
http://smsarquitectos.com/
http://hicarquitectura.com/2013/07/sms-arquitectos-nursery-and-primary-school/
http://afasiaarchzine.com/2013/09/sms-arquitectos/
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nas Shaping Practice lecture #02: Alfredo Brillembourg
on Thursday, 2 November, Alfredo presented a bold, brilliant and bonkers 90 minutes talk about his inspirations - from a childhood encounter in Venezuela with Aldo Rossi, through Joseph Beuys, to Gil Scot-Heron; the self-instigated and revolutionary work by U-TT; a monologue of encounters with the ‘globalised traders’, “the most important person you know”, of “one urbanised planet” 2050; to his not-yet published proposals for Parangole, a 21st Century “free-plan” reimaging of Constant’s New Babylon (as well as driving Polly to distraction as he repeatedly stopped en route to the venue to photograph the Newcastle-Brasillia “streets in the sky” which segued into Parangole). His provocative pronouncements raised questions that should challenge everyone to consider the role of the architect in society as well as individual ethics and responsibilities as an architect, before he invited everyone to get drunk with him [a miscalculation that quickly became apparent as the first pint of Jakehead IPA was delivered and certain lecturers started to debate which were better, Ryder and Yates or Gillespie, Kidd and Coia...]
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nas lecture tonight
Northumbria Architecture Society are pleased to welcome Martin Lydon of Haworth Tompkins back to Northumbria University tonight, Thursday 26th October, to talk about their creative re-use work. This will be a must see lecture for anyone designing performance spaces.
Lecture theatre: CCE-001,
Date: Thursday, 26 October 2017 18.30 - 19.30
#northumbria#architecture#interior architecture#creative reuse#performance space#howarth tompkins#martin lydon#nas#northumbria architecture society
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Land of Oak and Iron Visitors’ Centre breaks ground
Work has commenced on site constructing £1.5m Crowley Heritage Centre. The concept design by Northumbria alumni, Matthew Glover (2017), was selected through a public consultation process. The design project was undertaken during the first year of the Master of Architecture programme.
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NAS lecture series 2017-18 “Shaping Practice” starts tonight with
Marius Grootveld of Veldwerk Architecten, TU Delft, RWTH Aachen and Rotterdamse Academie van Boukunst to Northumbria University.
The lecture will take place Thursday 12th October at 18.30 in room CCE1-002 City Campus East (NE61 8ST).
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3D Reid Student Prize 2017
Congratulations to Oliver Hopwood (MArch 2017) whose Campus for Planet-Critical Technologies is in the final shortlist of 6 schemes, out of 25 entries this year - each representing a different UK school of architecture, which will be presented to the judges on 17 July.
About Oliver’s project:
Repurposing Shotton Mine: an adaptation of a post-extractive landscape
Oliver’s project addresses the sharp edge of humanity’s impact on the environment – a vast, post-mining landscape in the heart of the greenbelt – and works across scales to the powers of ten. The proposition does not seek to disguise how the landscape has been used, but to reconceptualise it as a sublime “found” condition. There are, however, also hints of a seductive dystopia in the landscape proposals.
Flora and fauna have already repopulated the fringes of the site, in marked contrast to the carefully manicured, mono-cultural earthworks of “Northumberlandia” nearby. The wider scheme re-connects the village of Shotton, two farmsteads cut off by the A1 to the west and two massive, tree-topped earth berms to the north and south, via the site of the proposal, to a new north-south service road and a reinstated local railway station to the north.
The brief developed for the site – a centre for restorative technologies – seeks to find new relationships to the environment through a research and development campus. The complex is designed to encourage accidental encounters between the different specialisms employed at the campus through a looped circulation, allowing continuous walking-talking meetings. Unmediated interactions between people and the environment occur as the complex’s employees travel vertically between the research facilities and earth-sheltered, communal eateries and the experimental lab and workshop zones for growing, fabrication and testing.
In such a vast, unforgiving, manmade landscape, the complex requires an appropriate monumentality. Elevating the loop of research accommodation creates a borderline-bonkers megastructure that references the revolutionary architectural language of Russian Constructivism and Archigram’s instant cities. Yet, there is also a considered and appropriate human scale to the proposal with calm and legible internal spaces that are natural lit and ventilated and have reciprocal views of the dramatic landscape.
From what could have been an uninspiring building typology, Oliver’s project is a tour-de-force. The spatial richness and variety is the very essence of architectural design, successfully making the everyday a bit little extraordinary.
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Gibside Walled Garden “Seed Pavilion” opening event
celebrating the Interior Architecture students work with the National Trust Gibside Walled Garden “Redesign Renew Revive” project.
#northumbria university#interior architecture#national trust#gibside#3R's project#allard newell#ben couture
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2017 “Reveal” Degree Show Preview Evening Thursday, 15 June, 6 - 9 PM
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Future Thinkers on Architecture at the Lit & Phil
kicked off tonight with 14 short talks in quick succession on subjects ranging from domestic clutter; communal pubs and communal bathing; urban density and urban complexity; social interaction at the cinema; food; the virtues of clay to virtue in aesthetics and even Tove Jansson’s Moomins.
Continues tomorrow from 6 PM at the Lit & Phil.
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Over 600 people experienced Experiments in Happiness 2017 this weekend. Congratulations to the MArch students who delivered the spectacular and surprising first floor rooms and activities for Amy Lord and Mint Moon.
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Experiments in Happiness starts at 5 PM tonight
teaser
After depositing your mobile at the 'phone creche’, head into The Happy Place bar serving a variety of cocktails in a mood-enhancing environment. To your left, as you enter is a mysterious box on legs. This is our "Silent Bar". The "Silent Bar" evokes the everyday experience of the regular customer at ‘your local [pub]’. When you walk in, Joe the bartender has your drink already waiting for you. Put down your £1 coin and take your drink. But you've not been here before tonight, the familiar ritual is suddenly rather uncanny... Settle down with you drink in whimsical base-camp and prepare to have your sense reality skewed amidst fantastical talks and performances. An unconventional opportunity to express yourself is also presented to you here. Move through into a blank canvas where your inner child can be released. Pick up a brush and express your emotions by playing with colourful paint as you see fit! Also please explore our playful fort/tent-like structure extending from the wall, where you may reflect and respond further to our event.Exiting the feedback room, walk to the left of the column to return to The Happy Place bar or walk on the right of the column to enter the video booth to leave a message: “Say what you have always wanted to say” anonymously. No interruptions and no judgement, but what is said cannot be unsaid.
Programme extract.
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Future Thinkers on Architecture
Free events on Monday, 22 and Tuesday, 23 May 2017 from 18:00 at the Literary & Philosophical Society .
Full Programme:
Monday, 22 May 2017
A Hafsat - Compact Cities: The Impact of Urban Intensification on Quality of Life.
E Baines – The World as an Image: Occularcentrism in Mass Media & ContemporaryArchitectural Practice.
F Bill - Cross-Over Architecture: Can the tools used in Cross-Over Literature be applied to Architecture.
D Breslin – Taste, Colour, Texture: The Design Process of a Michelin Starred Chef.
E Burroughs - Domestic Clutter and the Architect: Analysing the Organisation of the Things at Home.
B Chan - Culture reflection on architectural description in different languages.
YS Chan - Spirit of Subterranean Areas: The human perception of underground space.
J Chandler - Pulled Through: The enduring authenticity of the community pub.
HK Chun - The importance of Japanese Public Bathing Culture on Urban Development.
J Cowling - A Bridge of Weak Ties: Cultural Relationships in the Small World of Architecture.
J Elleray - Plugged-in: The impacts of pervasive gaming on the built environment.
J Feeney – Shaped Shapers: How cultural practices influence the processes of the architect and architecture.
C Forshaw - The Architect and Cultural Identity: How are memorial spaces used within cities to portray cultural identity.
H Forsyth - Bank Architecture: Portraying Security in a Digital Age.
M Hagyard - Food in the Community: How does food impact on our cities.
C Herron - Technological influences on behavioural codes in society and social interaction.
SC Hung - How do colours influence human emotions?
D Ireland – Social Cohesion: Wellbeing and the Effectiveness of Cinema
Tuesday, 23 May 2017
K Jacka - The Virtue-Centric Architect: The Architectural Manifestations of Human Virtues.
J Marshall - Wabi-Sabi & Architecture.
E Morgan - Complexity and Architecture: How does complexity theory relate to the practice of Architecture.
G Narciso - Branding, Consumerism and Architecture: An analytical study of Branding and
C O’Connell - The Architect and The Consumer: “The Dupe” & “The Hero”
G Paul - The notion of a fragmented society: The development of community into a new multi-level social construct.
J Pearson - Architecture & Brand Development: The Craft Brewing Industry within Newcastle upon Tyne.
J Primmer - How can an extrospective framework assessment of a community contribute to urban and community architecture.
A Sage - How and why do architects approach the inclusion of biophilic design in their work.
F Sedgewick - The Craft of Pottery: Art, Art therapy and Architecture.
L Smith - Exploring the social implications of the rise in single person households in Britain: The Benefits of introducing co-housing communities.
P Smith - Storytelling + Architecture: A study of storytelling through studio Ghibli’s “Spirited Away”
C Snell - The Architect and The Umwelt: An exploration of architecture and the perceptual worlds of different organisms.
A Taylor – The Commercialisation of Craft: The Architects Role in in a Modern Material Environment.
QM Trinh - Cooking Architecture: A Taste in Architectural Design
P Wontner – The Uncanny and Contemporary Design
T Yeadon - Hygge & Architecture: Considering Human Emotion in Design.
K Yung - Transportation Revolution: The future airport
For further info, contact: [email protected]
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Experiments in Happiness
13 Grey Street, Newcastle upon Tyne
19th May 5pm-11.30pm 20th May 2pm - 11.30pm
FREE (limited capacity):
PRESENTED AS PART OF THE LATE SHOWS 2017
Experiments in Happiness is a site-specific Live Art research project led by artist Amy Lord and produced by Mint Moon.
Joe Chandler, Katy Jacka and Liz Morgan, 1st year Master of Architecture students have designed and built the first floor pop up bar/cafe space and a feedback activities. Discover different artworks and interactive experiences over 3 floors made in collaboration with local artists including: Rosa Poselthwaite Lizzie Klotz Zoe Murtagh
The project uses science, psychology and philosophy to explore the idea of ‘happiness’ and mood.
Cocktails will be available from YOUR HAPPY PLACE bar.
Full details about the project and the process at: mintmoon.org.uk and amy-lord.com This project is kindly supported by Arts Council England and The Sir James Knott Trust #EIH17 Twitter: @_mintmoon
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nas Teaching Practice: talk #08 Steve Larkin
18:30 - 19:30 Thursday, 30 March 2017 in Nixon Hall, Wynne Jones Building
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