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8

9 Architecture Research Unit

Architectual Research Unit


aru.londonmet.ac.uk

ARU is an architectural design laboratory


primarily concerned with the exploration
of ideas about space. These ideas are
tested in live projects. We consider these
live projects to be design as research.
ARU continues to work on the design of
new buildings at Paju Book City in South
Korea, as built demonstrations of the
urban and landscape guidelines that we
made for Paju in 1999.
Positive People Publishing Company,
completed in April 2007, is designed
as a pair of related figures that frame a
tapering public courtyard open to the
street.
Youl Hwa Dang Phase 02, is the third
cultural building designed by ARU along
the same street in PajuBookCity. It is an
extension of a building that ARU designed
for the same client several years ago. It
will house a new art and culture book hall
and two apartments on the floors above.
The Art Yard Faade is set back from the
street to create a new public space.

Thin House will form a new building


ensemble with an Old Gardeners Cottage
within an 18th Century landscape in
Somerset, England. This landscape is
structured like a city in many respects,
a quality the project aims to reveal and
enhance.
2
1. Thin House, Hadspen,
Somerset. Design sketch by
Florian Beigel, July 2007
2. Youlhwadang 02, faade
model. The Art Yard Faade is
enhanced by a thin tectonic
relief to give civility to the
public space in front.

3. Construction of
Youlhwadang 02 started in
May 2008 and is expected
to be completed by early
2009. The yellow poster
says: Youlhwadang Fine
Construction (Ltd.). Photo:
Network in Architecture,
May 2008

The Saemangeum project is a large 400 km 2


land reclamation project on the west coast
of the Korean peninsula. ARU is exploring
ideas about a water city of co-existence.
In this and all new works, ARU continues
their design research into the idea of an
architecture of continuity. What can a
building do for the city? is an essential
question in these design investigations.
The Positive People and the Youl Hwa
Dang 02 Buildings are joint design
collaborations between ARU and Network
in Architecture, Seoul.

4. Positive People is designed


as a pair of related figures,
one standing still and the
other slightly turning away,
forming a little public court
between them. We refer
to the public space as a
positively charged void.
5. Photo: Jonathan LovekinA
33 km long sea wall was
completed in Spring 2007 to
enable the land reclamation.
This is the longest sea wall
in the world. Photo: Philip
Christou, January 2008
5

11

Foundation Diploma
Tutors:
Pablo Gil
Ingrid Hora
Onkar Kular
Marie Lund
Inigo Minns
Rose Nag
Alexander Schellow
Marloes ten Bhomer
Paolo Zaide

The theme for this years work starts


with the premise that the architectural
environment is not only defined by the
physical matter in which it is embodied.
On top of form and substance lies
another, more intimate reality that can
be described as interpretation. This
perception of space is deeply personal,
consisting of a constant interplay between
the physical fact and a complex layering
of memories, feelings and associations.

1. Nobuki Takagawa, New tree


2. Andrea Gillow Closter, 1cm
of Intimacypart 1
3. Abdulqadir Hussein, Vanity
unit

So what happens when these personal


interpretations become distorted or
exaggerated? When the experience of a
place becomes so affected by our personal
relationship to it that it becomes far
removed from the everyday and rational,
and slips into a subconscious world of
excess, confusion and fear? This is the
reality for sufferers of extreme phobias and
exaggerated desires, and forms the basis
of the research field for this years design
project in which we ask the question:
How can we as designers deal with these
exceptional psychological states?

12 Foundation Diploma

13

First Year
Collecting Curiosities

Kingsland is an area that lives a shadowy


existence, appearing in street names,
station names and preserved on some
modern maps, such as the London AZ
(2005), that valiant conserver of lost
London districts. But if you were to go
looking for it, you would be hard put to
find such a place in modern Hackney it
appears on no signposts, such as the
ubiquitous blue signs that point to more
vital locales. So where has it gone?

Tutors:
Ian Ferguson
Pablo Gil
Timo Haedrich
Ingrid Hora
Joerg Majer
Rose Nag
David Pierce
Juliet Quintero
Timothy Smith
Paolo Zaide

We are interested in uncovering the


students personal positions, be they
functional, playful, poetic or bizarre
and with this in mind have defined a
series of mapping exercises and building
workshops to encourage an exploration of
the built environment and their particular
relationship to it.

Students were sent off on a journey


along Kingsland Road and challenged
to discover tiny fragments representing
activities, desires and memories. The
imaginative understandings of the route
and their investigations of phenomena
that distinguish the moments along
it, created an inventory filled with
material a collection of curiosities. The
critical, absurd and fantastic qualities
of this collection were captured in
interpretative drawings and transformed
into 3-dimensional installation pieces that
collectively triggered the memory of the
students journey.

4. Daron Christie, micro-vista


5. Lex Quiambao, I can see
you
6. Andrea Gillow Closter, 1cm
of intimacypart 2
7. Jeannie Carr Lopez, distorted
viewpoint

1,2. First year interventions,


Dalston displays

14 First Year

15 First Year

Annex (v) 1. to attach, append, or


add, esp. to something larger or more
important. 2. to take or appropriate, esp.
without permission. 3. (n) a subsidiary
building or an addition to a building.
Through the making of the curiosity
collection students set out to identify and
to explore their own particular interests.
This helped the students to develop an
individual brief for a small building. An
annex to Kingsland Road, an attachment
to something existing, a fragment on a
rooftop, somewhere between or under
existing covers. The buildings developed
from Kingsland Road hidden stories and
reflect the routes shifty and eccentric
character.

3/7. Luke Royffe, pigeon


restaurant
4. Hassan Abbas, dairy/cheese
monger
5. John Freddy Diaz,
cardboard workshop
6. Linda Bjorling, steam house
8. Robert Kwolek, silversmiths
on cotton gardens
9. Edouard Rochet, hemp oil
refinery
10. William Fairminer, tape
studies

10

16

17 First Year Part Time

First Year Part-Time

Pan 1

Pan 2

Tutors:
Chi Roberts
Rose Nag
Nikolai Delvendahl
Sarah Newine Moore

The part-time level one students are


introduced, or re-acquainted, with the
rigor and creativity of design by engaging
with the difficult process of making
their ideas as artefacts and making
representations of their thinking as
drawings.

An Inhabited wall for music practice and


performance. A Patisserie formed from
the study of stacking, baking and smoke.
A Twisting tower of winding stairs to view
the city and voice opinion. A Sunken
theatre inspired by a dried fish head.

Critic:
Andy Stone

1. Chris Heal
Making Ideas
2. Francesco Farci
Visual Thinking
3. Samantha Rance
Making Ideas
4. Alan Benzie
Visual Thinking
5. Simon Campbell
Making Ideas

Through the modules Visual Thinking


and Making Ideas the basic tools of
drawing and making are handled and
used to explore, explain and represent
aspects of our material, social and
conceptual world but more importantly
to critically reflect on the process of
designing.
We scrutinised a collection of objects
to draw out the explicit and implicit
information. The qualities, properties,
materialties, forms, structures,
components, symmetries, surfaces and
more, were revealed and interpreted
to begin to describe, understand and
develop our own thought processes.
We also investigated the particular
provenance, histories and meanings of the
objects and explored ways of representing
the complex relationships between the
many and various aspects.

The variety of the propositions from the


part time studio emerges from the diverse
spectrum of professions and backgrounds
of the students. They come together once
a week to create the atmosphere of an
'instant studio'. The full-time studio brief
is adapted to their different experience of
the degree course.

The site, on Dalston Lane opposite the


new East London Line station building
site, was selected for its proximity to
Ridley Road market and the stories
behind the colourful mural on one
boundary wall. Students were asked
to design a building for repairing or
making. This was interpreted in different
ways through the preliminary mapping
of the market and developed through the
particular interests or expertise of each
student.

We regarded the objects as


representations of groups of objects and
arranged them as part of a collection.
We surveyed the objects in a variety of
contexts whilst being aware of how we
position ourselves in this process. By
proposing alternative materialities for
the objects or alternative forms for the
material of the objects, the viability of
the object in the original location was
questioned. It suggested the object be
displaced to other locations and finally
replaced in a new site/context.

18 Running Head

19

Studio 1
Htel
Tutors:
Daniel Rosbottom
David Howarth
Guest Tutors:
Alex Bank
Sam Casswell
David Grandorge

1. Adam Gielniak, sketch


describing the htel as urban
figure
2. Study models of the Place
des Vosges and six htels
particuliers situated in the

Marais. Their placement


corresponds to the htels
location as depicted by
Turgot in his isometric survey
drawings of Paris, completed
in 1739

This years programme has examined


the typology of the hotel. In French, the
word htel is more ambivalent than is
understood from its English usage. In
defining its attitude to the contemporary
hotel, the studio studied the typology of
the htel particulier, which developed
in Paris during the 16th and 17th
Centuries. Grand urban residencies for
an emerging bourgeoisie, they imposed
rational, geometrical and idealised
forms onto the haphazard fabric of the
medieval city. In the Marais, the Place
des Vosges, around which a constellation
of these htels gravitates, propagated
such ideas at an urban scale. Ultimately
this attitude to urban form led to
Haussmans transformation of the city,
two centuries later.
The project takes as its context the
introduction of the new high-speed rail
link from London to Paris and Brussels,
integrating into a wider European
network. In London, the move of this new
service to St Pancras Station has instigated
the refurbishment of Giles Gilbert
Scotts Midland Hotel; at the time of its
completion in 1876 this was one of the
most opulent hotels in Europe. Our project
is situated in the City of Paris, at the other
end of the line, on a site adjacent to two
major stations, Gare du Nord and Gare de
lEst. The site lies between the geometries
of Haussman and the field space formed
by another urban imposition, the
constructed topography of the railway.
Unlike Giles Gilbert Scotts hotel, our
project mediates directly between the city
and the space of the tracks.
This wider context extends the studios
ongoing interest in the resonances
between different scales of space. The
project oscillates from the scale of the
room to that of the city: from the intimate
space of the bed, to the public space of the
salon; from the hotel as a figure within the
city, to the form of the city itself.
The investigation of the room began in
the reconstruction of a series of rooms
discovered in paintings. Using modeling
techniques inspired by Thomas Demand,
students investigated spaces found in
paintings by Hammershi, Gandy and
the Dutch masters of the Delft School.
These studies established conversations
about both the structure and the surfaces
of rooms, which transformed into
propositions for a Salon.

20 Studio 1

21 Studio 1

6. Tim Burton, a painted


room, study model, after
Emmanuel de Witte,
Interior with a woman at the
virginal, 1665
7. Charles Chambers, model
study of htel room interior
8. Jonathan Connolly, a
painted room study model,
after Vilhelm Hammershi,
Woman in an interior,
Strandgade 30, 1901
9. George Gingell, a detail
from an interior study
model of the Salon,
a public room in the htel
10. Jonathan Connolly, detail
from a faade study
model (1:20)

A grand public room, removed from the


specificity of particular programmatic
requirements, the design of the Salon
focused instead on issues of form,
proportion, light and material qualities.
It became the catalyst for the design of the
larger building, in counterpoint to detailed
studies of individual hotel rooms. Third
Year students have designed 100 room
hotels, whilst Second Years have worked
on a 10 room hotel for railway workers.
The room meets the city through the
faade. Photogrammetric studies of the
Place des Vosges articulated issues of
repetition and variation, which were of
immediate relevance to the character of a
hotel faade. In focusing upon the formal
character of its face, the project recalls the
htels role as a cultural edifice, a figure
in the city.

3. Jakob Gate and George


Gingell, planometric
drawing of the Htel de
Sully, 1625
4. Gemma Wood,typical floor
plan of the htel
5. Gemma Wood, typical floor
plan of the Htel

3
7

10

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Studio 2
School
Tutors:
Tom Coward
Vincent Lacovara
Geoff Shearcroft

23 Studio 2

This year we learned about schools.


Here education is taken to mean; The
process by which each child is helped to
prepare itself for adult life. At present,
the only thing on which experts in
education agree is that some preparation
is necessary. The extremes of policy now
practised range from unlimited freedom
for the child to a complex course of
progressive instruction in which almost
every hour is covered from the age of two
to twenty two. Somewhere between these
lies the preparation which the average
citizen thinks every child ought to have.
The Design of Nursery and Elementary
Schools, H. Myles Wright & R. GardnerMedwin, 1938

Case Study Schools

The Folly Of Learning

All students started the year working in


pairs producing detailed spatial analysis
of three London case study schools:
Charles Dickens Primary School, Hallfield
Primary School and Friars Primary
School. The schools were tested through
the architectural devices of model,
plan, section and elevation. In most
cases, research couldnt help but turn
into speculation, with school hall floors
turning to toffee.

Second semester started with an urban


scale study of Swiss Cottage focussing
on its unique collection of institutions,
activities and communities; from
smokers corners to new luxury
apartments to Sir Basil Spences library.

A field trip to Copenhagen gave students


an opportunity to experience a further
set of very different case study learning
environments; from Hellerup Skole to
Christiania Freetown to Utzons Bagsvrd
Church.
An Extended Welcome
In a rapid design project in Semester A,
all students developed proposals from a
real brief for an extended entrance and
reception with community and learning
spaces for Charles Dickens Primary
School in Southwark.

1. Najat Mohamed, library,


Swiss Cottage Performing
Arts School
2. Christian Palmer and Maria
Peralta, Charles Dickens
Hall with toffee floor
3. Zeinab Rehal and Darta
Viksna, model of Charles
Dickens classroom
4. Zeinab Rehal, Grassy Hill
Stage

Second years finished the semester


developing proposals for a Folly of
Learning for Hampstead Theatre.
Somewhere between a cricket pavilion, a
classroom of the future and an outdoor
theatre, the folly is an imaginative new
learning space for the Theatre that also
acts as billboard, inviting conversation
between institution and community.
Through School Academy
Meanwhile, with Hampstead Theatre as
their hypothetical client too, third years
designed single form entry throughschool academies on a constrained
urban site close to the theatre. Students
investigated ways of challenging the UKs
conventional subdivision of education
in to infant, junior and senior and in
to subjects, classes and streams by
providing one through-school for 5 to 16
year-olds. What kind of architecture fits a
new kind of learning?

24 Studio 2

25

Studio 3
A Bank in Maidenhead
Tutors:
Matt Barton
Frank Furrer

Studio 2s year of propositional research


broadened the students understanding of
the design of learning environments. The
work forms a partial essay in the shape
that schools take, charted against the
continually reforming context of welfare
and pedagogical policy in the UK.

Collaborators:
Peter Beard
Roz Diamond
Tom Emerson
Mia Frostner
Andreas Furrer
Bernhard Furrer
David Grandorge
Adrian Jones
Simon Jones
Hans-Jrg Eggimann Adam Khan
Brad Lochore
Will Muir
Rose Nag
James Payne
Jon Shanks
Peter St John
Rasmus Troelsen
Peter Zumthor

Thanks to: Jaime Bishop, Jon Buck, Matthew


Butcher, Dominic Cullinan, Carl Fraser, Hareth
Pochee, Ottilie Ventiroso, Martin Waters.
Special thanks to Christina Godiksen

5. Maria Peralta, Three


Towers Academy. Inspired
by the growth of children,
this school translates the
traditional British system
of primary, junior and
senior education in to
three interlinked towers.
Where the towers meet,
shifts in architectural scale
provide spaces of exchange,
circulation and negotiation.
6. Najat Mohamed, courtyard,
Swiss Cottage Performing
Arts School. Infants, Juniors
and Seniors are arranged
around a shared central
learning courtyard.
7. Linda Mirtcheva, Backstage
Academy. Studying becomes
a performance, expressed
and experienced through
architectural composition.
Activities are encouraged
through suggestive
spaces. Backstage
describes everything
that is a preparation for
performance. These areas
pop out of the external faade
of the building, making the
backstage public.

The students of Studio 3 designed bank


branches for the suburban town of
Maidenhead. Collaboration with both
architects and individuals from other
artistic practices was central to the
intellectual and creative development of
the studio's work.
The year began with studies of three
buildings in London: Congress House,
The Camden Arts Center and The National
Theater. Under the heading 'Looking and
Representing' we made hand printed
black and white photographs, 1:20 interior
models and 1:1 drawings.
We traveled to Switzerland and were
given incredibly privileged access to
towns, settlements, buildings and
ateliers. From the town of Bern and the
settlement Siedlung Halen we traveled
East to Graubuenden. We stayed in the
Thermal Baths in Vals and saw a variety
of buildings including the vernacular
architecture of the Val Lumnezia. The trip
ended with a major retrospective show of
Peter Zumthor's work in the Kunsthaus
Bregenz.
On our return we went to Maidenhead and
began a research project in collaboration
with a young graphic design practice
called Europa. We collated this research
in an edition of 25 hand bound books
which served as a collective resource for
the subsequent work.

1. Kamal Shah, photograph of


Maidenhead High Street
7

26 Studio 3

27 Studio 3

2. Anton Burdeinyj, interior


model (1:20), Camden Arts
Centre
3. Europa and Studio 3,
front cover, Knowledge Bank
4. Kevin Brewster, elevation
(1:100)
5. Max Laceys 1:100 model
6. Caroline Svennerstedt's 1:50
model
7. John Laide, model (1:50),
photograph by David
Grandorge
8. Monether Lafta, 1:1 detail

The theme of 'Looking and Representing'


was followed by 'Approximation' and
finally 'Resolution'. Our idea was to
use models and verbal description
to approach the design of a building,
thinking simultaneously about
atmosphere and structure. From our
research we were aware of the functional
demands of the programme but wanted
to begin with a physical proposal before
testing its organization.
We used large scale drawings to
investigate spatial and contextual
relationships; interior models to give
a sense of scale and atmosphere and
1:1 drawings which try to make an
equivalence between materials and their
representation.
We started the year with Peter Smithson's
polemical statement, 'Architecture is not
made with the brain'. On reflection we
feel that the best work has supported this,
with making coming before theorizing.

28

29 Studio 4

Studio 4
Constructed spectacles

In the opening sequence of the 1956


movie The Man Who Knew Too Much,
Hitchcock stages the assassination of
a spy in the Djemaa el Fna market of
Marrakech. The markets name means
Assembly of the dead in Arabic. Contrary
to this, the square forms a stage set for
different protagonists: during the day
crowds gather to watch a play of acrobats,
story-tellers and magicians that by
night transforms into a performance of
flickering lanterns and savoury mist.

Tutors:
Paolo Zaide
Sabine Storp

Our starting point for the year was the


spectacle. We were investigating the
notion of architectural space as a field
of events and sequences. This suggested
that places and buildings are never still
but constantly in a state of flux defined by
economic exchange, cultural shifts and
changing climates.
Through a series of projects, spectator
and spectacle, students took a close look
at the shifts and movements somewhere
in London (traces of forgotten spaces,
snapshots of contemporary life, an
overlooked space in the city, a space
trapped within a split second, a space
unfolding in a rhythm, the imperceptible
space of an encounter, an intermittent
space). A series of projects were
developed using film material or a vessel
of projected narrative to define their
individual interest and to form a distinct
architectural brief.

The Final Project took us to Marrakech,


Morocco. Projects were sited in the gap
of the real and imaginary, between fact,
myth and speculation. Observing that
spaces have never been static, changes
are the key condition for the variety of
proposals developed in the studio 4
this year.

Local Marrakeshis, eager to guide


the uninitiated through the medinas
labyrinthine souks, refer to the space
in English simply as Big Square, but
the Djemaa el Fna isnt a square in any
European sense of the word. Emerging
from one of the narrow alleys to the
north or west into its vast expanse gave
me the sense that I had been flushed
through a great flume into an eddying
torrent of humanity: The Djemaa el Fna
is an eruption of multiple human spirits,
vivified over the course of its daily cycle
by a tumbling assortment of acrobats,
juice-sellers, snake-charmers, storytellers, monkey-pimps and meat-grillers,
crooks, beggars, drummers, donkeys,
cars and carts.
As a tourist in Marrakesh I was always
semiconscious of the collusion between
us as foreign observers and the locals we
observed; of our strange role in creating
and sustaining the landscapes, situations
and lifestyles we appeared, superficially,
to be merely witnessing. Nonetheless,
walking in the medina it is possible to
plunge authentically from century to
century within the space of a few steps.
I saw skilled basket makers working in a
manner unaltered since the time of the
Almoravids (who ruled the city during
the course of the 11th and 12th centuries)
and observed a second later rooftops
coated by a thicket of satellite dishes,
each a simulacrum of some object of
contemporary desire
Ben Farnsworth, Real time,
18 February 2008
Thanks to: Dimitris Argyros, Jacki Chan,
Pascal Bronner, Ed Farndale, Maxwell Mutanda,
Corinna Thielen, Peter Szepaniak, Patrick Weber

1. Rebecca Fode, Laundry At


Night
2. Myrabel Menis, Veil theatre
3. Ben Farnsworth, Djemma El
Fna Hamam
4. Viktor Westerdahl,
temporary structure
5. Rebecca Fode, Frogs legs
6. Rebecca Fode, Irritation
7. Marie Kozjar, Moments
8. Marie Kojzar, perception cast
3

30 Studio 4

31

Studio 5
Social Gravity
Tutors:
David Kohn
Emily Greeves
Client:
Pablo Flack, Bistrotheque
Consultants:
Acoustic Engineering
Stuart Colam, Arup Acoustics
Structural Engineering
Steve Baker, Alan Baxter & Associates
Environmental Engineering
Jane Jackson, Max Fordham LLP
Restauranteur
Pablo Flack

Critics:
Hermann Czech
Christophe Grafe
Silvia Ullmayer
Florian Zierer

10

11

9. Sinan Pririe, Tweaked


10. Dean Myers, Gardenshed
11. Bogna Sarosiek, Shadow
Transformation
12. Bronwen Loftus, Flux
13. Asia Bartkowska Music
theatre

As London changes, its public spaces


and social character are under constant
negotiation. There is an ever-present need
to redefine our collective ambitions for
the public realm and how they can be
realised materially. What form should a
contemporary architecture take that is
able to establish and maintain a sense of
belonging to the city first and foremost
and to the world of commercial private
interest second?
In this context, the unit studied restaurant
design. The year began with detailed
surveys of several exemplary London
restaurants and bars, The Wolesley,
Bistrotheque, Petersham Nurseries and
Gordons. We then began to develop a
restaurant brief from first principles by
designing a meal in an open space, from
the menu to the seating arrangement.
Following a field trip to Vienna, proposals
were developed for a site in Soho.
Restaurants usually occupy existing
buildings. Therefore, designing new
restaurant structures presented an
unusual challenge. What should a
restaurant faade be like? Does the
buildings structure enable or hinder
particular table layouts? Consequently,
can an intimate dining experience have
a spatial impact on the city?

Research
1. Elodie Drissi, sketch,
Palmenhaus, Vienna
2. Michal Oglaza, survey
drawing, Petersham
Palmenhaus, Richmond,
Petersham Nurseries
1

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13

32 Studio 5

Throughout the year we discussed


Austrian architect Hermann Czechs
advice that a good restaurant should
not be noticed but remembered. An
even greater challenge then, to create
a memorable background to a meal
enjoyed. The role of the architecture might
seem tautological at first, background
and memorable seeming irreconcilable
ideas. Consequently, the project requires
a subtle, complex, irregular and possibly
absurd response from the architect.

33 Studio 5

3
8

Interior studies
7. Paul Little
8. Elodie Driss
9. Peter von Essen

Site plans
10. Paul Little
11. Peter von Essen
12. Alex Thomalla
13. Civita Halim
14. Stephen Kennelly
15. Mette Soerenson
9

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12

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15

5
Designing a meal
3. The Representalists: a
guerilla restaurant made
of tape, National Theatre
environs
4. Autumn celebration: a
meal to celebrate autumn,
Hyde Park
Exterior studies
5. Elodie Drissi,
polychromatic facade
6. Paul Little
6

34

Studio 6
Entertaining London The
Riverside Enjoyment
Tutors:
Denis Balent
Andrew Yau

35 Studio 6

You can play beach volleyball on a sandy


riverbank next to a palm tree in a pot if
you are in Paris, or you can enjoy a late
evening fashion show next to the Tiber
River if you stay in Rome. What if you
are in London, and what does the River
Thames have to offer?

London is a unique European capital city.


Not only is it one of the most intensified
and diversified cities, it is one of the
most entertaining too, full of events and
inspirations. However, it seems the role
of the River Thames has always been
downplayed. This year, studio 6 looked
into the opportunities in transforming
London with the touch of leisure and
enjoyment along the river Thames.

The Thames retreats to expose hundreds


of meters of beach twice a day up and
down its length. Below the level of the
roads, sounds of the traffic are filtered and
the acoustics offered up by the banks echo
seagulls instead. The most inland tidal
sandcastle building site, the foreshore is
London's underexploited playground.
Reclaim the Beach

The Thames Foreshore or the Upper


Pool of London is the stretch of river
along London Bridge to Tower Bridge,
which has been well known for its
historical presence as well as its affiliated
spontaneous events. There have been
summer festivals, music and feasts in
the past. The Frost Fairs in the winter
of 168384 belong some of the best
documented events.

1. Lida Neishabourian,
banking/exchange
2. Gabriel Lee, solar charger/
caf
3. Todor Demirov, gallery/
broadwalk
1

Studio 6 investigated the complexities


of the site and potential impacts of the
proposed interventions. The students
explored the collaborative phenomena in
contemporary architectural design and
tested collateral behaviour in their works.
The students visited Barcelona or Brighton
and formulated a palette of initial ideas.
They have advanced their design in Tower
Foreshore in London investigating new
architectural possibilities in working with
component-based projects testing the
potentials in responsive and performative
behaviour in design.
Studio 6 would like to thank:
Eduardo De Oliveira Barata, Jonas Lundberg
Hugo Mulder (Arup Advanced Technology +
Research), Nathan Wheatley (Buro Happold),
London Metropolitan Works

36 Studio 6

37

Studio 7
Architecture of Rapid Change
and Scarce Resources
Tutors:
Robert Barnes
Annika Grafweg

During the academic year and with a


field trip in November 2007, the studio
investigated illegal settlements in the
Kalyanpurii, Jilmil Industrial area and
Sundra Nagri areas of Delhi east of the
Yamuna River. The illegal settlements
were either spaces adjacent to earlier
resettlement schemes which were filled
with the overflow from these schemes,
or in the case of Jilmil Industrial Area,
vacant plots undeveloped by the factories
and warehouses built between the Grand
Trunk Road and the Delhi to Calcutta
Railway line.

These mostly single storey, brick,


back-to-back rooms straddling winding
pedestrian lanes are home to desperately
poor workers, lacking sanitation, adequate
clean water, health and education
facilities. These developments are all
around 20+ years old and although
established do not have any proper
status within the Delhi 2020 master plan.
Designated JJ Camps, they appear as
blank areas on the Eicher Map of Delhi
(the AZ equivalent), in stark contrast on
Google Earth where they appear as the
most densely occupied areas of the city.

4. Aris Theodoropoulos,
newsagent/bookshop
5. Wei Hou, beachhut/sundeck
6. Chris Fulford, gallery/terrace
7. Christine Wong, hotel/
gallery

By engaging residential communities in


conversation between architect and user,
establishing a contemporary discourse
around their changing physical and
cultural landscapes, the studio enables
design projects to be provoked by
encounters between designers and their
clients.

1. Put Verit Veliquissim


Dignissi.
2. Per Sequam, Quam, Sum
Vullaor Iure Facip Ea Facing
Ea Acil Ipissi Blamet
3 .Dolor Sum Zzriliqui Tio
Do Ea Feuisl Et, Si Te Tatue
Feugait, Suscipi Smodolor

38 Studio 7

39 Studio 7

4. Se Duipsum Dolore
Consequametperos autet,
secte magnim aliquis
5. Quipis Nosto Et La
Feugait El Utat. Oborem
Dit Pratperos autet, secte
magnim aliquis
6. Wisl Ullaor Sit Utatum
Zzrit Adio Commoloreet
Iureperos autet, secte
magnim aliquis
7. Moluptat Vullan Velessectet
Augait Velesed Delesseniat
Volor Sisi.
8. Obore Feu Feuis Dolore
Ming Et Ulputpat Accum
Velendiam Quisci
9. Ulputpat Accum Velendiam
Quisci Inibh esed
dolorperos autet, secte
magnim

Each of the settlements studied are


distinct in character, culture, history, and
urban grain. By surveying the physical
landscape and consciously interacting
with local people, students built a
physical and cultural picture of each
settlement. Student proposals have grown
out of these investigations. In the illegal
settlements priority has been given to
upgrading rather than resettlement and
thus methods of phasing and decanting
the local population gradually and
sensitively during the process has been
paramount.
Prior to the November field trip,
techniques of investigation together
with designing with loose fit and green
technologies at community level were
practised in a preliminary project based
in Bethnal Green.
6

In summer 2008 and continuing


throughout the following year, a live
student project will start to improve
educational and health facilities in a
series of 10 quarries, Mumbai.

7
4

40

41 Studio 8

Studio 8
A Palace of Projects

One House, One City


Studio 8 continued this year with its
research and proposals for the Diocletian
Palace in Split, Croatia. This complex urban
context, configured by the dense medieval
city that evolved over time within the walls
of a fortified Roman Palace, remains the
heart of modern day Split. A lively dialogue
of coexistence of layers of history and of
modern life provides the potential for
continuous change and for contemporary
spatial interventions to contribute towards
a strategy for the future evolution of the
palace/city. This is currently a topic of
much debate and social dispute amongst
its citizens and policy-makers. The studio
has been developing proposals for a Palace
of Projects, a growing archive/museum of
architectural projects for Split both Built,
Unbuilt and Unbuildable.*This public
building for the display, study and storage
of drawings, models, books, documents,
photographs and films related to the
history and architecture of the city itself
aims to create a dialogue between its past,
present and future. It arises from the need
to house and make publicly accessible, the
contents of several existing archives that
currently are in private hands.

Tutors:
Daniel Serafimovski
Adam Khan
Contributors:
Nada Prlja
Thomas Goodey
Consultants and Critics:
In London
Phil Christou
Alan Conisbee
Pierre DAvoine
Max Fordham
David Grandorge
Ioana Marinescu
Rose Nag
Andy Stone
Tyron Zall
In Split
Igor Caljkusic
Carlo Grenz
(Carlo Grenz Foundation),
Ana Grgic,
Ivica Mitrovic,
Mirko Petric
Snjezana Perojevic
(Research Center for Mediterranean
Architectural Heritage)

* The title of a book by architectural historian


Robert Harbison.

Two Journeys
The programme illustrates the studios
underlying interest in the enigmatic
qualities of museums, archival spaces
and reading rooms; the qualities of
internalised spaces. We started by
studying the hybrid world of Soanes
Museum in London, developing models
and detailed drawings of selected
spaces.* Our theme for an architectural
archive is inspired by the spirit of Soanes
museum, as well as by Brodsky and
Utkins nostalgic project for a Museum
of Vanished Houses, and Ilya Kabakovs
utopian The Palace of Projects.
During our trip to Split, visits to two
archives, the contents of which were
documented, together with surveys of
a series of sites within the Diocletian
Palace, formed the foundation for the
development of students projects. We also
collaborated with architects, designers,
sociologists and members of staff and
students from the Architecture School
and Fine Art Academy in Split. A series of
dinners, walks and seminars served as an
introduction to the complexities of this
city and its contemporary issues.
* Drawings adopted the representational
technique described by Robin Evans as The
Developed Surface, in his essay of the same title.

Thirteen Ways*
While designing new spaces for this
city, we referred to Nollis map of Rome,
Robert Adams survey of the Diocletian
Palace from the 1760s, and to Aldo
Rossis observations about Split in
The Architecture of the City.** These
references, and various other precedent
studies, formed the basis for research
about the relation between exterior and
interior space, public and private space,
old and new, and the temporary versus
the permanent. Students have developed
proposals with an infrastructural
approach, offering new / appropriated
public spaces and buildings characterized
by a civic quality, urban generosity and
an inherent adaptability to the changes
of use over time. Each project responds to
the as-found properties of the individual
sites; their spatial, material and figurative
qualities. Each project reflects a personal
interpretation of what a Palace of Projects
might be. A selection of the students work
will become the basis for a publication
and an exhibition in Split in autumn, 2008.
* Thirteen Ways another book by Robert
Harbison, that borrows its title from the poem
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird.
** Aldo Rossi: Split discovers, in its typological
form, an entire city. From here it follows that the
single building can be designed by analogy with
the city.

1. Viktoria Kovalevskaya,
Tower house, charcoal
drawing
2. A view of Split and a model
of Split in a painting by
Girolamo De Santacroce
3. Studio 8's 'Archive' of
Architectural Models
4&6. Valerio Fornasini,
Void space project, 1:50
site model showing the
proposals vertical and
horizontal infill volumes
5. Valerio Fornasini, Void
space project, 1:25 interior
model showing the archive
/ study spaces below the
hanging gallery space
1

42 Running Head

43 Running Head

Studio 9
Interior Architecture
Private Exhibition Public Living
Tutors:
Nerma Cridge
Tania Lopez-Winkler
Sophie Ungerer

Traditionally, the architectural objects


dealing with living and monuments are,
respectively, houses and exhibition in
public spaces. This year Studio 9 work
explores and challenges the boundary
between the living/house as interiorprivate and monument/exhibition as
public-exterior. The projects aim to
question apparent opposites: fragment/
whole, inside/outside, public/private,
temporary/permanent with the notion of
boundary as the initial basis.

6. Briony Clarke, Ghost house


project. Conceptual and
sectional sketch; conceptual
model showing descent into
archive space.
7. Briony Clarke, Ghost house
project. Section through
courtyard showing the
subterranean archive
and stiletto shoe-shaped
structure providing a space
at roof level.
8. Briony Clarke, Ghost house
project. Site model showing
insertion of rooftop viewing
platform.
9. Agata Podgayna, Red
pallazzo, cast model study
for red concrete facade and
a 1:50 model of volume/
interior
10. Agata Podgayna, Red
pallazzo, sketch models of
staircase and archive spaces
11. Agata Podgayna, Red
pallazzo, contextual
sectional drawings

Studio 9 encourages a constant


questioning of pre-existing definitions
of Interior Architecture. Our students
projects aim to demonstrate that this
discipline has the potential of containing
the most creative aspects of several other
related disciplines such as product design,
scenography, art and architecture. Thus,
we believe that the focus of the design
enquiry has to continuously shift in
between the intimate space of the interior
and the public space of a city.

1. Jolita Prusaityte,
construction sequence of
Beehive structure
2. Jolita Prusaityte, Dolls
house living within
miniature square, Nelsons
Closet Collage, bringing
Trafalgar Square elements
into proposed student living
units
10

11

44 Studio 9

45 Studio 9

1. Point of View any where in London


This project deals with relationships
between the viewer and the view and
how the framed view creates a fluid
boundary between an exterior and
interior. The main elements and principles
identified in the framing process were
introduced into the Inhabited Forest
project, taking them as starting point for
the creation of an inhabitable structure.

2. Inhabited Forest Larrasoaa,


Spain/Hampstead Heath
Located in a series of specific sites in
San Sebastian, Spain and Hampstead
Heath, London this project worked with
real clients, the artists Federica Tavian
and Gonzalo Laborra, and their brief
to design an inhabitable sculpture.
The project sets up the idea of living in/
with a monument and explore issues
of verticality/horizontality, fragment/
whole, individual/society, inside/outside,
materiality and sustainability. The point of
departure in questioning these apparent
opposites is the domestic space as a series
of dispersed, temporary, fragmented
elements and activities instead of a
singular complete object.

3. Rebecka Haymoz, portable


student housing units,
collage
4. Antonio Maggi, IN-OUT
project, layered section/
elevation
5. Antonio Maggi, IN-OUT
project, elevation west
Georgian theme facade
7. Sophie McDonagh,
Trafalgar Square: a birds
life, conceptual collage
6. Malgorzata Roczniak,
panoramic perspective
8. Golnaz Alavi Tabatabai,
water exhibition perspective

3. Private exhibition, Public living


Trafalgar Square, London
The projects required proposals to create
exhibition and living spaces in Trafalgar
Square. Some of the questions being
explored in the design proposals include
the very definition of a public square, the
status of the citizens as opposed to the
tourists, the relationship between the
co-existing public exhibition and private
living space, and even the consequences
of consumerism and globalization. This
is how the boundary of the inside/outside
and private/public becomes traced,
altered, blurred and ultimately erased.
4

46

Studio 10
[Title]
Tutors:
Catrina Beevor
Nicola Murphy

47 Studio 10

Studio 10 has concentrated on the


fundamental discipline of Interior
Architecture and thus has explored how
to make internal environments that
support and provoke everyday life in rich
and compassionate ways. Our site for the
years work has been Chamberlain, Powell
and Bons heroic Barbican Estate.
After an initial project for an outdoor
kiosk there, the students identified and
recorded sequences of internal spaces in
two very different buildings the Wallace
Collection in Manchester Square and
Erno Goldfingers house on Willow Road
and examined how linked rooms can
sustain alternate uses and atmospheres.
We looked at threshold, detail, decoration,
construction and furniture.
These recordings of sequences of oncedomestic spaces were then plundered
and re-interpreted first as proposals for
designs of cabinets for the storage of lifes
necessities and then as propositions for
one-room living in a given location within
the Barbican Estate.

The second semester countered our


erstwhile concern with the nature
of private space by consideration of
civic amenity. With further ideas and
inspiration from a visit to Le Corbusiers
Unite dHabitation in Marseilles, we
returned to consider what a public room
might be, particularly in the context of the
Barbican megastructure? By suggesting
that it is to the Barbican as a whole what
a drawing or living room would be to a
single house, our final project project
built on the studios previous work on
the sequencing of domestic space and
its ceremonies. The public room(s) the
students have proposed are sited in the
airspace above the Barbicans Brandon
Mews (currently disfigured by a 1970s
brown polycarbuncle). This space links
easily to the main podium level of the
Barbican and is also within the principal
public courtyard of the Barbican, a
dramatic amphitheatre which makes
the site a natural focus point and a great
place for the collective social life of the
Barbican residents to take place.

1. Maria Lundstrom, Wallace


Collection, record of spatial
sequence
2. Adela Stasova, public room,
Barbican, part of imagined
sequence of spaces
3. Nadine Schuy, public
room, Barbican, imagined
sequence of spaces
4. Maria Lundstrom, public
room, Barbican, model
4

48 Studio 10

49 Running Head

8. Nyasha Woodley, public


room, Barbican; aerial view
of Brandon Mews
9. Christian Litz, public room,
Barbican; floor plan
10. Maria Lundstrom, public
room, Barbican; sections
showing proposed sequence
of spaces

The Box- Sections

Window Seat

Dance Studio/ Stage

Entrance One/ Exhibition

Sofa

Table

Section A-A
Storage under Dance Studio

Desk

Moveble Unit

Moveble wall/ Storage

Entrance Two

Entrance One

Section B-B

Section C-C

Open Cupboard/ Storage under


Dance Studio

Moveble Wall
Book Storage

Desk and Storage

People using the


Window seat

Scsle 1:50

10

50

Unit 1
Landscape As City
Land Rooms And City Rooms
Tutors:
Florian Beigel
Philip Christou
(Architecture Research Unit)

51 Unit 1

This project is intended to offer a critical


proposal for a new city-landscape, a
new urban form, by designing for an
extended community with a broad social
mix on sites where new buildings are
usually forbidden. It is intended to be an
exemplary exercise to demonstrate viable
alternatives to current planning practices
that encourage building only within
existing local population centres. The
intention of the landscape as city project
is to imagine a dispersed densification of
the land, providing for a greater number of
people to live and work on the land.
We are working with concepts of space,
doing design as research. In particular
we are caring for the ideas and quality of
spaces in the city. We are asking ourselves:
What can buildings do to give quality to
public space? How can the intervention be
an improvement and a compliment to the
character of the historical setting?

We have tried to remind ourselves of the


notion of the memory of landscape in city
spaces. This has provided a useful support
in the designs of students who could see
this memory of landscape, and have been
able to make excursions into pre-city time.
Land cultivation patterns that have turned
in time into human settlements have been
studied. This could be regarded as the
origin of a city.
Working inside or in the vicinity of an
architectural archaeology, such as a
ruin of an ancient abbey, students have
designed a city catalyst. Students began
by carefully studying a number of places
of this kind.* They then examined the
potential of these architectural witnesses
of time for generating new spaces and new
uses. Some imagined this to be a farm,
or a new town in the grounds of a former
country estate, or a partial inhabitation of
a historic ruin.

Within sites of this historical and cultural


importance, the design proposal is formed
by the way one draws both the natural
and cultural topography and the ancient
structures. The way one visualises the site
is an important initial part of the design
process.
The most successful projects make an
architectural proposal that reinforce or
intensify an already existing topographical
feature (such as a ridge, or a valley) to
form the basis of a new city structure. It
is important to realise that city structures
are not determined by programme or use.
They can accommodate many different
activities, functions, or programmes.
City structures can accommodate future
changes that were not yet known when the
urban landscape design plan was made.

FB/PC May 2008


Florian Beigel and Philip Christou are working
on design research projects in the Architecture
Research Unit within the school.
http://aru.londonmet.ac.uk
* Landscape as City is a book of city origin
studies by Diploma Unit 1 students at London
Metropolitan University. Edited by Alexander
Gore, Paul Rawson, Nicola Read, Matt Whittaker.
Introduction by Florian Beigel and Philip
Christou. Published by Architecture Research
Unit, London, Jan. 2008, 142 pages, 14 colour
pages, 296mm x 240mm, ISBN 798-0-95444845-5. (A limited number of copies are available
to purchase at: http://www.waterstones.
com/waterstonesweb/displayProductDetails.
do?sku=6258668

1. Robert Mc Cluskey,
Fountains Abbey. Making a
ruin datum at the river edge.
2. Tom Bates, Fountains Abbey,
south courtyard elevation
3. Fountains Abbey, A new
paved terrace along the foot
of the cliff face provides an
infrastructure for future
buildings
4. Alex Gore, extension of
public space at Fountains
Abbey, Yorkshire

After visiting Hadrians Villa near Tivoli in


Italy last November, students chose one of
the following sites to work with:
Fountains Abbey, North Yorkshire
Wimpole Hall, Cambridgeshire, with
farm buildings designed by John Soane
Hadrians Villa, near Tivoli, Italy
The north bank of the Thames River
(facing towards the Tate Modern)
between the Thames and St.Pauls
Cathedral

5. Alex Gore, extension of


public space at Fountains
Abbey, Yorkshire
6. Awot Kibrom, a view from
the ruin of Fountains Abbey
to one of the new buildings
7. Awot Kibrom, first steps
towards the densification
of the grounds and ruined
buildings at Fountains
Abbey, Yorkshire

52 Unit 1

53

Unit 2
The Space Within
and Between

The Locus is a relationship between a


certain specific location and the buildings
that are in it. It is at once singular and
universal. Aldo Rossi, Larchitettura
della Citt, 1966

Tutors:
Rik Nys and
RU2 Cuba projects

As in previous years, the unit is interested


in what we call the geology of cities
and ancient sites. Departing from
historic stratification, we adhere to
cultural sustainability while adaptation
to current needs and modern briefs
remains at the core. We continue our
research on specific materials and
respond to particular environments with
affordable low-tech solutions. Social
preoccupations, environmental concerns
and technological constraints underpin
decision making, while both light and
atmospheric conditions aid with form
making.

1. Ian Smales, light, space and


structure
2. Charlotte Mockridge,
montage, shade and shadow
3. Site meeting with Cuban
representatives and
students

All three sites are in the city of Sancti


Spritus, in the province with the same
name. We have been collaborating closely
with our Cuban counterparts, which
include students of the architectural
department of the neighbouring province
of Santa Clara and professors of the future
architectural school in Sancti Spritus.

10
8. Anna Page, Hadrians Villa.
Plan of land room in the
Vale of Tempe.
9. Dingle Price, sketch.
Reconstruction of
Hadrians Villa according to
archaeological research.
10. Dingle Price, Hadrians
Villa, Tivoli. The new city
figure, ancient and new
structures drawn together.

12. Dingle Price, Hadrians


Villa. View from Tivoli of the
new city with Rome on the
horizon.
11. Hadrians Villa. In the
foothills of Tivoli, garden
and urban building facades
address the hortus land
room in the Vale of Tempe.

The projects a vocational school for


construction, a pre-university school,
and a conference centre for sustainable
research for the university have been
established with the University Jos Mart
Perez, the local heritage commission, the
city of Sancti Spritus and the ministries
of Education. All programmes are to be
constructed in the foreseeable future and
the briefs and proposals will be further
developed with the mayor stakeholders.

11

12

54 Unit 2

4. Giuseppe Messina, site


observation, vocational
school
5. Francesca Giannuzzi,
section, conference centre
6. Alessandro Milani,
conceptual and comparative
models of the Casa del
Faun in Pompeii and the
proposed conference centre
7. Alec Borill, model of
internal space, vocational
school
8. Julian Merill, casting the
light

55 Unit 2

10

Collaboration between the Universities of Sancti


Spritus and Santa Clara in Cuba and the London
Metropolitan University:
Dr. Ing Osvaldo Romero Romero, CUJM, Vice
rector; MsC. Arq. Eugenio Domnguez Prez; MsC.
Lic. Elba Ferrer Lorenzo; MsC. Lic, Osmani Prez
Fardales; MsC. Lic. Mara Antonieta Jimnez
Margolles, City Historian;Arq.Vivian Dorta
Rodriguez ; Arq. Mayra Prez Martin, Planning
Ing. Manuel Marrero, Soil Investigations; Arq.
Abdel Martnez Castro; Ing. Olga Lidia Bernal
Mayea, Provincial President of the National Union
of Architects and Structural Engineers.

11

9. Ilgi Karaaslan, light study,


resin model
10. Developing prints
on site in Cuba
11. View of Sancti Spritus
12. Nick Bristow, model,
pre-university school

Contributors:
Alessandro Penna; Matthew Philips; Alex Arestis;
Anne Markey, Dir. ASD Projects office; Rik Nys,
Director Research Unit RU2; Max Fordham OBE,
Environmental Engineer; Alan Conisbee, Structural
Engineer; Carsten Vellguth; Thomas Goodey;
Matthew Barton; Timothy Smith; Marc Raymond;
Holy Westley; Robin Monotti; Charles Barclay
With the support of:
Dr.Rodolfo Alarcon Ortiz, First Deputy Minister
for Higher Education; Brian Roper, Chancellor
London Metropolitan University; DrC. Manuel
Guillermo Valle Fasco, Rector CUSS (CUJM); H.E.
Rene Mujica Catelar, Amabassador to the UK; Mrs.
Silvia Blanca Nogales, First Secretary for Scientific
and Cultural affairs; Steve Dove, Principal
Policy Adviser, London Metropolitan University;
Prof. Robert Mull, Head of the department
of Architecture and Spatial Design, London
Metropolitan University
7

12

56

Unit 3
Big surprise
Tutors:
Judith Lsing
Julian Lewis
Dann Jessen
Consultats:
Ashley McCormick
Andy Greig

57 Unit 3

If you go down to the woods today


Bostall Woods in South East London
is surrounded by stretches of terraced
housing and a suite of high street centres
that serves its inhabitants poorly. This
metropolitan open land covers an area of
ground larger than Regents Park.
Almost nothing happens here. The myriad
of terraced streets of housing set around
its edges offers no interaction in terms of
use or even views. And yet the condition
that results is strangely generous,
being open and loose in structure, and
a compelling alternative to the dense
urbanism fixated on town centre living
and artificially mixed uses.

The unit has employed documentary,


research, discussion, speculation and
imagination to understand the nature
of these locations, and how to work with
the place. We have worked with artist
Ashley McCormick to research activities,
uses, preferences and wants. An interest
in the edges of places has led us on our
unit trip to Rome, to see the Via Appia
and the Olympic Village. A seminar with
Fred Manson, Ken Worpole and Robert
Mull has helped to understand the role
of the woods in a London wide context.
Generating a focused and productive
conversation has been a key part of the
years work.

In the second semester, each student has


set their own objectives for proposals
which involve local re-structuring to
enhance the place without erasing
valuable qualities. Existing constellations
of use, and the buildings and spaces
accommodating them have been closely
examined, imaginatively understood, and
added to.

1. Peter Hall. Through taking


photographs of Bostall
Woods and following the
picturesque landscape
hunters method of
positioning and editing out
people, cars or anything
else that might spoil the
picture, an alternative view
of these metropolitan woods
was obtained.

2. Aya Okada. Sketch exploring


relationship between
Shooters Hill, Abbey Woods,
Thamesmead and River
Thames, and a possible green
cycle route.
3. Seminar in the Hayward
Gallery with Ken Worpole,
Fred Manson and Robert
Mull.
4. Peter Hall. Before and after
watercolour studies of a
college building as a figure on
the horizon of Bostall Woods.

58 Unit 3

59

5. Johnny Lung, Lesnes


Abbey Farm. To create new
spatial relationships, land
is reconfigured into plots of
various sizes in accordance
to their related use. Some
spaces are more generous,
e.g. the grazing paddocks,
where others are much
smaller and intimate, e.g.
courtyards. The plots have
been given names that
derive from the history of
the abbey as well as others
that are more farm related.
6. Johnny Lung, axonometric
drawing of new farm around
Lesnes Abbey.
7. Michael Na, Abbey Wood
Community Library sits on
the edge of the woods and
between the high street and
the flyover, mediating the
space between these three
conditions.
8. Christopher Storie, sketches
of folly and its relation to
Lesnes Abbey ruins and
the existing ornamental
gardens.

Unit 4
Urban Ecologies II:
ParametricMorphologies
Tutors:
Steve Hardy
Jonas Lundberg
Eduardo De Oliveira Barata
(Urban Future Organization)

The Prime Minister recently announced


that annual UK housing targets would
rise from 200,000 to 240,000 new homes a
year. However, a primary concern is that
many of the new market homes are built
on brownfield sights that are typically
located in floodplains. A study by the
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)
and the Foresight Future Flooding report
provide an analysis of flood risk in the UK
and claim that the cost of future damage
could total from 1bn and increase to
20bn a year by the year 2080. Rather
than work with real design changes to
our iconic dwellings in these potentially
hazardous zones, according to the LTGF
and the Stern Report, we continually
over-invest in long-lived, high-carbon
infrastructure & mitigation systems. As
architects and design researchers faced
with these flooded environments we
should be investigating locally-driven,
design changes that enable, challenge and
fundamentally adapt the structures we
inhabit.
1. Chris Robeller, intellishade
2. Lizzie Ruinard, beehive

60 Unit 4

This year Unit 4 examined the single


family terrace house and the atypicality
of a typical floodplain development in
the UK. The unit accepted the need for
a radical typological and morphological
change in how these buildings meet the
ground and hence interface with the
floodplain. Alleviating direct ground
contact with living space could potentially
save billions of pounds in future damages
and fundamentally readdress the spatial
and typological configurations of the
dwellings. Working between the master
plan and the individual housing unit,
we investigated arrays of homes along
a proposed street and the associated
potential of parametric modulation
within this series. We considered the
qualitative effects and sociological affects
of these serial modulations and explored
the internal differentiation and spatial
individuality that can be grown, or bred,
through the differentiation of the serial
parameters.

61 Unit 4

Unit 4 continues to experiment with


digital design tools and techniques that
allow multiple iterations of a concept
to be examined within given social,
political, urban and economic contexts.
They look specifically at generative,
associative and parametric modelling
techniques which aim to develop and
formalise the relationships between
multiple constraints and variables
within the complex patterns of urban
ecologies. In contrast to the dominant use
of computers as a type of digital pencil
where preconceived ideas are entered
into a computer program, rendered
and detailed, Unit 4 embraces a more
cyborgian design process. These processes
aim to reveal design potentials found
within systemic and rule-based logics of
digital design techniques.
Steve Hardy, Jonas Lundberg and
Eduardo Barata are all members
of Urban Future Organization, an
international architecture office and
design research collaborative. They
were awarded the RIBA Part II Tutor
Prise in 2003. They have lectured and
taught extensively internationally. Urban
Future Organization has won a number
of international competitions and has
exhibited its work at the Venice Beijing &
Beijing Biennales.

3. Chris Robeller, interior


material system
4. Chihming Huang, array
5. Yin Ho, river view
6. Yin Ho, typology
7. Marcos Z Lopez, roofscape
8. Marcos Z Lopez, landscape

62

63 Unit 5

Unit 5
Fluid
Tutors:
Steve McAdam
Christina Norton
Angelika Lienhart
Natalia Alonso

Mentors and friends

This year the unit pursued three


interwoven projects, each evaluating and
extending architectures intrinsic public
and social dimensions. The first project Building a public - explored ways in which
designers, users and stakeholders could
shape a dynamic that would properly
inform design intentions and build
ownership as a basic generator of the
civic, social and spatial values associated
with public space. This was anchored by a
live project for the design of a playground
on the Isle of Dogs.

During the design process the unit has


been assisted by Wolf Mangelsdorf,
Jim Fleming and a group of graduate
engineers at Buro Happold, and equally
by Mark Gillingham, an Associate at
landscape architects Gustafson Porter.
We are greatly indebted to them for their
help and support. We would also like to
express our thanks to those who agreed to
be our Mentors and who each delivered a
talk on participatory design or the public
realm and later attended a design crit:

The second project Building in public


called for the detailed design of a
playground for the Timber Wharves estate
in the Isle of Dogs in close collaboration
with residents, children and various
stakeholders. The design was approached
through four competitive groups of
students, who each elaborated a project
through participatory processes and
design values defined through the first
project. The client, users, stakeholders and
mentors selected what they considered
to be the best design scheme through a
series of events in mid November in which
just under 800 local people were involved.
The selected design was subsequently
developed further by 4th year students,
who also pursued detail design refinement
through the ATA Prototyping Module.
The project secured planning permission
in February 2008.

David Barrie, Channel 4 TV producer and


regeneration consultant
Dr. Paul Brickell, Urban/Community
Regeneration Expert, Director, Leaside
Regeneration
Clare Cumberlidge, Cultural Planner,
Director, General Public Agency
Jim Fleming, Engineer, Buro Happold
Mark Gillingham, Landscape Architect,
Associate, Gustafson Porter
Manu Luksch, Artist, Ambient TV
Wolf Mangelsdorf, Structural engineer,
Group Director, Buro Happold
Lucy Musgrave, Community Regeneration,
Director, General Public Agency
Martin Orton, Media and Engagement,
Director, Bold Creative
Stephen Thake, Policy/Community
Regeneration/Reader in Social Policy. LMU
Prof Jeremy Till, Architect /Author/Teacher,
Head of Architecture, Sheffield University
Greg Villalobos, Media and Engagement,
Director, Bold Creative

The third project A public building


asked the fifth year and MA students to
outline, programme and design clear
public realm projects for the Isle of Dogs
drawing on their intense understanding
of the areas particular and curious
situation, and first hand experience of the
difficulties associated with contemporary
public space. The propositions could
meld architecture, landscaping and civil
engineering to define these new territories.
Fourth year students were asked to pursue
similar objectives, but only to concept
design stage, having spent further time
developing the playground project.

1. Kat Davis, Youthtalk.


Local youths fess up on
gangland culture (later
plotted and mapped)
2. Tabitha Pope, Ballooning,
Balloons fitted with powered
LEDs were distributed
through letterboxes with
an invitation to meet the

Design

3. The urban theatre


Concept design by Linda
Gustafson, Michael Tarring,
Phoebe Braidwood and
Caroline Khoo. Planning
application drawings and
risk assessments by all
dip 5 members. Further
development and detailed
design by all 4th year
students. The rig supports
play and props and offers the
possibility of impromptou
configurations and
inter-agency curation of
events (drawing by Michael
Tarring).

students and talk about the


playground insitu. Balloons
were inflated with helium at
the event as an enticement
appealing equally to kids
and vicious teenagers. (with
Kat Davis, James Nichols,
Fungling-Ngan, Vicky Loh
and Sadiqa Jabbar).
5

4. Linda Gustafson, Circus


school, site plan. The circus
school is contained in a
large, floating structure
anchored to a new river
bus landing. It will inject a
new dimension of life onto
the tired streets of the Isle
of Dogs, and some badly
needed humour.
5. Linda Gustafson, Circus
School, elevation

64 Unit 5

65

Unit 6
Architecture of
Rapid Change and
Scarce Resources
Tutors:
Maurice Mitchell
Sumita Sinha
Francesca Pont

By engaging communities of occupants in


everyday conversations in space and time
so as to evoke in contemporary discourse
their changing physical and cultural
landscapes the studio enables people
provoked projects by design.
This academic year, during a field trip in
November, the studio investigated illegal
settlements in the Kalyanpurri and Jilmil
Industrial areas of East Delhi as well as
another contrasting site surrounded by
crumbling Havellis (closely packed urban
courtyard town houses) in Old Delhi.
The illegal settlements were mostly
spaces left over from earlier resettlement
schemes which were filled with the
overflow from these schemes. Built
defensively around the time of the Sikh
riots in 1984 these mostly single storey,
brick, back to back rooms straddling
winding pedestrian lanes are home
to desperately poor workers, lacking
sanitation, adequate clean water, health
and education facilities.

6. Michael Tarring, Bridging


the gap. The scarcely used
expanse of the Millwall
Docks are brought back
to life with layered bridge
connections and floating
islands sporting sport
facilities, landscaped decks
and the odd cafe.
7. Niko Lutener, Intensified
park, park masterplan.
The Mudchute park
offer is both intensified
and protected through
installing a ring of facilities
around the park. These
respond to the high density
developments proposed
further north and make
use of existing institutions,
infrastructure and
topographical features.
8. James Nichols, Lido 2.0.
An array of servers, those
invisible agents of todays
on-line public realm,
provide a suitable degree
of irony and the necessary
heat to keep the lido waters
usable all year. The lido fills
an old lock space beside the
Thames.
9. Kat Davis, Carnival HQ
collage. The new HQ,
a battery to charge the
streets, is located on the
site of Prices Fun Palace
in a kind of pier structure
reminiscent of Klimt and
the constructivists.

1. Nicolas Maari, Kalyanpuri


site survey. This survey was
carried out by 12 students
over two weeks as part of
their Delhi field trip.
2. Amelia Rule, Kalyanpuri
Bazaar street plan. This busy
street is the only through
road. The narrow street is
dominated by the active
women of the settlement,
washing clothes, chatting
with neighbours whilst
watching the everyday
activities around them.

66 Unit 6

67 Unit 6

These new organic settlements are a


counterpoint to the other site which is
a gap in the tumbledown Mughal Old
City, layered with history, picked over
by goats and hovered over by doves and
stringed kites with its brick and stone
walls framing dusty views reminiscent
of an orientalised 19th Century colonial
painting. This site, alongside the main
bazaar street connecting Delhi Gate with
the Jama Masjid is home to two of the fifth
year schemes.
Each of the settlements studied are
distinct in character, culture, history, and
urban grain. By surveying the physical
landscape and consciously interacting
with local people students built a physical
and cultural picture of each settlement.
Student proposals have grown out of these
investigations. In the illegal settlements
priority has been given to upgrading
rather than resettlement and thus the
method of decanting the local population
gradually during the process has been
paramount.
Prior to the November field trip,
techniques of investigation together
with designing with loose fit and green
technologies at community level were
practised in a preliminary project based
in Bethnal Green.
Starting in summer 2007 and continuing
throughout the year a live student project
to improve sanitation in Kuchpurra, a
village in Agra, provided material for an
exhibition of work to inform the RIBA visit
in October 2007 and precedent for future
live projects planned in the area for the
coming year.

3. Yougesh Bhanote, sketch of


the mat maker
4. Shamoon Patwari, existing
elevation of old Mughal
pavilion in its setting
5. Azedah Mosavi, elevation
of proposed communal
courtyard
6. Nisha Kurian, section
showing biogas cooking
system in Saritas Kitchen
and Kalyanpuri Womens
Tribunal Meeting House.
7. Bo Tang, The kite field.
Flying kites and exercising
pigeons are rooftop
occupation in Chitli Qabar
Chowk.

8. Bo Tang, proposed long


elevation of Haveli Campus
9. Amelia Rule, Kalyanpurri
Community Centre, detailed
section. This shows the
construction of the dome
over one of the two main
spaces in the Community
Centre. You can see the
difference in the quality of
the daylight in the dome
and the courtyard. The
housing behind has direct
access to the roof space,
making every aspect of the
Centre communal.

68

69 Unit 7

Unit 7
Timber/Building/City

She drifted into the body of the flat, the


sitting-room, the kitchen. She placed
the silver tray on the wooden drainingboard. She made another cup of coffee
and smoked another cigarette and read
Time magazine This weeks cover
story was about the weather. As usual.
It was hard to believe that the weather
had until quite recently been a synonym
for small talk. Because nowadays the
weather was big talk. The weather made
headlines all over the world. Every day.
On TV a full reversal had taken place: the
handsomest newscasters and the brainiest
pundits were all weathermen now; and
the whimsical tweed-suited eunuchs,
who used to point rulers at charts and
apologize about the rain, came on at the
end to give the other news, or what was
left of it. Meteorologists were the new
war-correspondents
Martin Amis, London Fields, London:
Penguin Books, 1989, pp.331332

Tutors:
David Grandorge
Peter Karl Becher
Matthew Barnett-Howland
Stefano Ciurlo-Walker
Consultants:
Planning
Duncan Bowie
Structure
Alan Conisbee
Timber Construction & Environment
Liam Dewar
Servicing & Environment
Max Fordham
Structure, Sustainabilty & Transport
Ramboll Whitby Bird
Critics:
Geir Brendeland
Trevor Brown
Alex Ely
Tom Emerson
Andrew Jackson
Viktor Jak
Adam Khan
Olav Kristoffersen
Robert Mull
Daniel Rosbottom
Rowan Seaford

Architecture must adjust to a changing


condition the new weather. This
adjustment is necessary not only to address
the challenges posed by the new weather
(adaptation), but also in an attempt to
ameliorate any further changes to the
weather (mitigation). It sometimes feels an
impossible task, but we can but try.
This year Unit 7 have explored the use of
timber as a structural element because of
the benefits of trapped carbon within it.
This has been tested in low-metabolism
housing proposals of medium to high
density for Dalston Junction and in a
pavilion built at Ecobuild in February of
2008. The housing proposals have been
augmented by designs for a significant
single-space building a hall for the city.

Students have re-assessed and interpreted


dense housing typologies from deck
access to the medium-rise perimeter
block, but also looked at how density
might be achieved in more traditional
terraced configurations and (presently
outlawed) back-to-back housing.
Due attention has been given to the
myriad of regulations and codes that now
impact on the development of housing
including density targets, planning policy,
section 106 agreements, fire regulations,
the Codes for Sustainable Homes,
Lifetime Homes and Secured by Design
and the provision of affordable homes.
We acknowledge that architecture must
not be defined by these regulations and
codes. We hope that it may still transcend
them in order to provide a dignified
backdrop to our lives and remain a thing
of beauty.

1. 4th year students of Unit 7,


Finnforest pavilion, built at
Ecobuild in February
2. Colin Wharry, housing,
sectional study
3. David De La Mere, housing,
interior model study
4. Colin Wharry, urban plan:
model study
1

70 Unit 7

71

5. Colin Wharry, housing,


interior model study
6. Patrick Quinn, urban plan,
model study
7. Mayuko Kanasugi and
Alex Tsangerides, timber
interpretation, model study
of the Unit dHabitation
8. Mayuko Kanasugi, single
space, model study of water
tower

Unit 8
Thames Gateway:
Climate Change Incubator

The Unit has continued its research


into the increasing urbanisation of the
Thames Gateway and the need to relate
this to the natural environment of the
Thames Gateway and the larger issue of
architecture and energy.

Tutors:
Raoul Bunschoten
Jorge Godoy
Marco Poletto

1. Eva Diu, agricultural


research centre. Studies of
the cybernetic machine,
three cirles intersect and
create micro climates that
change over time and in size
to develop various scientific
experiemnts.

Climate Change is affecting society to


such a degree that all construction and
urban planning is changing. But exactly
where this change is leading nobody
knows yet. How much energy are we
using in cities and how much will be
soon available? Can cities become energy
producers? This question leads to the
continued efforts of the unit to work with
incubators of pilot projects, both in the
China and the Thames Gateway.

2. Dan Pedley, wind belt. A


small belt that vibrates
in the wind and creates
electricity. This belt can
be incoprporated into
the surfaces of scientific
colonies throughout the
Thames Gateway.

3. Ben Fallows, actual


prototype for an expanding
object for the Cross River
Park area, next to the hames
Water water treatment
plant. It filters and puriefies
water and contributes to the
soil clean up and general
water treatment of London.

72 Unit 8

73 Unit 8

The Thames Gateway is a natural


incubator and therefore the right place,
politically, socially, culturally and even
economically, to develop test projects
that in some way address energy and
other environmental issues. Each student
is working on one prototype project
somewhere in the Thames Gateway with
the aim to proliferate it throughout the
Thames Gateway.
This is part of an ongoing programme to
both map basic environmental conditions
in the Gateway as well as effectively
starting to design elements of the Gateway
as Climate Change Incubator. There is a
beauty in innovation; and an aesthetic
power in the newly developed prototype.
We aim to continue to develop this
beauty. Parallel to that we have been
researching the early cybernetic texts
and linked the concepts of cybernetics to
the organisation of prototypes. Cities are
complex organisms and the development
of prototypes connecting energy issues
to urban complexity leads to a renewed
search for the potential of cybernetic
thinking.

7. Ben Fallows, water and soil


purification landscape
8. Ben Fallows, water and soil
purification landscape
9. Ben Fallows, maps for the
Thames Gateway Atlas,
hydrographic negotiations
10. Dan, Pedley wind
funneling for the wind
belt energy mechanism,
buildings for a scientific
colony
11. George Morgan, energy
storage mountain system
12. George Morgan, view
to the energy storage
mountain

4. Charles Wu, complete cycle


of an urban prototype in the
Cliamte Change Incubtaor
5. Charles Wu, site plan in the
Thames Gateway, pods and
biodiesel automotive factory
6. Charles Wu, flowting pods
near industrial sites during
high tide

5
10

11

12

74

75 Unit 9

Unit 9
City seen and unseen

In Unit 9 we have been considering


aspects of housing as the body from which
our cities are made; not just containing
private existences but also being the very
fabric which shapes our public spaces
and structures our communal lives. The
design of new housing is therefore at once
a profoundly urban as well as an intensely
architectural challenge.

Tutor:
Stephen Taylor
Pepijn Nolet
Nathan Jones

We have spent the year working with


this problematic in the East End of
London, studying the positioning
and configuration of housing, and its
relationship to places of work. Projects
have asked students to tackle this mix of
uses and to consider its implications
density and proximity not as a problem
per se but rather as an opportunity for the
creation of a vital urban environment.

The economics and geography of Londons


growth offer a fertile ground for an
exploration of the contemporary role
of housing within urban regeneration;
Londons housing stock must grow rapidly
to support its population growth, but
displacing the citys industrial activities
beyond its borders to make space for new
housing does not seem sustainable as an
urban action.

We have studied historical precedents


where the relationship between housing
and industry has shaped the built
environment. A study trip to Lyon focused
on analysing and documenting the
Croix Rousse neighbourhood, recording
not only the impact its topographical
condition places upon the urban form,
but also how the social and economic
circumstances of Lyons eighteenth
century silk trade influenced the
relationship between its spaces for living
and working.
An initial design exploration required
students to be immediately propositional
at the small scale, developing proposals
for mixing family housing and industrial
workspace for a site in Bethnal Green
that forms part of an existing urban
ensemble high street to back land.
Through maximising density and the
intensity of adjacencies, students were
asked to develop attitudes towards tactics
of mediation, from spatial configurations
to the making of windows in walls.

These pieces of research established the


ground for the major project of the year,
working within the context of Hackney
Wick, an industrial area where the
potential for transformation through
development pressure and the particular
catalyst of the Olympic project is real.
In order to discuss wide-ranging issues of
diversity, density and delivery, students
were asked to work collectively to develop
urban scenarios that considered how to
reconcile the difficult bits of cities that
often make uncomfortable bedfellows.
These form the context for the final
building proposals individual projects
with self-defined programmatic scenarios
a place to live a place to work.
In developing strategies for scales
and forms of mix at both urban and
architectural levels, we have sought to
frame strategic decisions in relation to the
potential of spatial and physical qualities.
These studies have worked towards the
design of a piece of city that is at once
seen as part of the general urban form,
whilst at the same time possessing a
specificity of particular relationships that
may be unseen other than by its dwellers.

1. Edward Ridge, perspective


view
2. Edward Ridge, elevation
fragment
3. Alex Baulch, physical model
(1:200)
4. Emily Barnes, physical
model (1:200)

76 Unit 9

77

Free Unit

02

02

Tutors:
Robert Mull
Celine Condorell
with friends chosen
by the students

02

03

03

01

04

04

The Free studio assists students in


developing and realising their own
projects. Each student prepares a detailed
contract describing how he or she will
structure and conclude their project. Each
student also chooses ten friends to help
them and judge their projects at the end of
the year. The unit places an emphasis on
the professional role the project implies
and to whom or what each student owes
their duty of care.

1 BED / 2 BED TYPE


01 : Courtyard
02 : Bedroom
03 : Bathroom
04 : Living / Kitchen
05 : Balcony
2 BEDROOM UNIT
50sqm

02

TYPICAL LONG SECTION


Ground oor access to gallery

02

02

03

02

02

Fran Balaam has been working with


the elderly in Bethnal Green. She
has proposed a new infrastructure of
seemingly ruined walls, orchards and
fields, which weave through the existing
estates to provide a gentle focus to a
dispersed and often forgotten community.

05

03

01

(image 2,4)

04

04

2 BED / 3 BED TYPE


01 : Courtyard
02 : Bedroom
03 : Bathroom
04 : Living / Kitchen
05 : Roof garden

04

2 BEDROOM UNIT
50 sqm

2/3

02

3 BEDROOM UNIT
60 sqm

03

02

02

02

02
04

01
03

2 BED / 3 BED TYPE


01 : Courtyard
02 : Bedroom
03 : Bathroom
04 : Living / Kitchen
05 : Roof garden

02

3 BEDROOM UNIT
60 sqm

Je Ahn and Maria Smith have been


working with a parental campaign group
in South Camden to identify and develop
sites for a much needed secondary school.
Their project proposes a string of seven
school buildings close to Kings Cross that
operate as a federation of small schools,
offering intimate learning communities
while sharing specialist facilities.
(image 1,3)

05

1 BEDROOM UNIT
40sqm

The projects are varied and closely linked


to their authors values and history:

04

3/4

03

4 BEDROOM UNIT
100 sqm

02

05

TYPOLOGY FLOOR PLANS . 1:100

5. Alex Baulch, flat typologies


6. Emily Barnes, perspective
studies
1

78 Free Unit

This bairro used to have 19 families. Today there are only four occupied
houses. I miss the days when children were playing and smiling on the paths.
Today is just old women struggling to go up and down the steps!

79 Free Unit

Matthew Halsall is from Liverpool.


Liverpool is European city of culture but it
is in the grip of a property slum. Matthew
exploits this tension to propose a way of
turning half finished and barely started
developments into a new civic landscape
of use to local communities until the
developers build again. (image 7,8)

Stef Rhodes has been working in Brussels


a city, which is surprisingly fragmented
and troubled. Her proposal is for a new
building in the desolate acres of slack
public space adjacent to the station.
The building provides a responsive base
for the many dynamic art and agitprop
groups that work in the city. (image 9,10)

Cristina Monteiro is from Porto and has


been working to protect and reinforce
the communities who live on the steep
slopes of the river in Fontainhas famous
for its subtle layers of mist. Cristina
stitches together the physical and social
infrastructures to re-establish parish with
a new parish hall at its heart. (image 5,6)

James Stopps is from Egham and his


site is the commute from Egham into
Waterloo. In an act of generosity to his
fellow commuters James has redesigned
the vacant Eurostar terminal at Waterloo
as a vast green waiting room for
Eghamites. A toehold in the city and a
space so engaging that they may never
want to leave. (image 11,12,13)
9

11

12

13

10

81 Running Head

MA Advanced
Architecture
and Interior Design
Tutor:
Rik Nys

The MA AID is a design-based and


research-orientated course that allows
students to focus on both individual skills
and achieve excellence within a particular
field.
The course addresses the needs of
graduates from architectural and spatial
backgrounds where traditional roles are
increasingly blurred and design skills
may be needed in a variety of guises. It
emphasises generic and transferable skills
in design of the built environment, and
locates the subject in this broader context
to encourage its graduates to seek and
create opportunities for the practice of
their discipline.
The course is one of a suite of designbased MA programmes, which focuses
on specialist approaches within the wider
discipline of design. It is a combination
of design-based research and taught
specialist modules. Design projects are
undertaken in a choice of postgraduate
studios, a history and theory course and a
wide range of optional modules. Over the
years, the design dissertation has proven
extremely popular. The main subject areas
are taught through a wide choice of tutors,
studios and interest groups with
a strong emphasis on self-directed study
and research.

Anja Telscher, light study model

The design and research projects


are assessed via a combination of a
presented portfolio of research and design
work made in response to a detailed
programme of a studio based project
and a 15,000 word thesis or equivalent
thereof. The course provides a broad set
of cultural and critical knowledge and
skills, which are useful in a wide variety
of fields such as education, publishing,
librarianship and journalism, media and
arts management. It also provides a route
to PhD study and thus a career in higher
education.

82

83

MA Cities Design
and Urban Cultures

On the Incomplete
Design for London by other means
The war-torn 20th century allowed,
after each catastrophe anew, the clean
slate of a utopian outset. Destruction
thus embodied a Faustian promise: the
destruction of the old world becomes
the condition for the construction of the
new. Considering this Faustian moment of
creation, this years research started at the
moment of its abandonment. The design
brief was to try to fashion an incomplete
fragment of the city with a different future
and potential life.

Tutor:
Ines Weizman

The abandonment of any urban


or architectural project registers a
moment of historical, cultural, political,
economical or personal interruption
and change. As much as it implies
transformations and disruptions, the
incomplete provides us with a potential
to register social change in built form.
Engaging the incomplete is to think of
architecture as a way of voicing critique
in matter. Rather than a fiction of a
depicted reality in the future, the idea
of an unrealised utopia lured over our
inquiry and design decisions. It forced
us to critically discuss, diagnose and
dissect the mechanisms of concrete
circumstances, situations, and power
struggles helping to develop a sociopolitical as well as an urban vision and
program.

The focus of investigation was London.


Here, the ruined state of Battersea
station (for which apparently no suitable
development scheme can be found), the
unfinished underground development
at Edgware Road (that could potentially
reinforce the greenbelt, or urban edge
through built form), the forgotten barges
of Rainham (that could assemble in an
urban choreography to form a small
museum site), or a high-rise that had lost
its floors (in such a striking way that it
could be a model for the rest of the city)
provided only a few entrance points to
explore the critical transformations as
they have taken place in the course of
history, but have remained, in some sense
unresolved. Circumscribing thus the
myth of an incomplete utopia was used
to open up a new field of possibilities
for planning and urban/ architectural
design. For, in as much as there can never
be and should never be a single, finite
architectural form of the city, there can
never be a single architectural future for
a building.

1. Jonathan Lovelace,
Extension of the Northern
Line, Edgware
2. Jonathan Lovelace, Mapping
the incomplete site
3. Jonathan Lovelace, Fivefingers versus the green-belt
4. Jacob Ripper, http://
groups.google.com/group/
battersea-power-station

5. Ibrahim Al-Nemeh, elevated


walkway, experiment
6. Ibrahim Al-Nemeh,
Leadenhall Street
development study
7. Jacob Ripper, Battersea
Station, mapping speculation
8. Ibrahim Al-Nemeh, strategic
vision
9. Ibrahim Al-Nemeh, urban
fantasy for the city of London

84

85 Running Head

MA Architectural History,
Theory and Interpretation
Tutors:
Robert Harbison
Colin Davies
Helen Mallinson
Joseph Kohlmaier
Aleks Catina
Hector Arkomanis

This course differs from others like it, in


starting from strong direct experience of
cities, landscapes and buildings. It is a
course which never forgets that it is taking
place in a city, one of the worlds most
diverse and lively. We make constant use
of London, in Histories, which tells the
history of architecture based on materials
at hand in the streets and institutions of
London, and in Interpretations where the
maps, exhibitions, novels and films which
form the texts of this module often have
the city itself as as their primary subject.
In Theories we travel outside
architecture narrowly defined to show
that illuminating comment often comes
from thinkers who were not intending
to refer only to architecture, who may be
philosophers, psychiatrists, painters or
anthropologists. Our approach is both
broader and more intense than most
students will be used to, aiming to
provoke the innate creativity of tutors
and students into action.

Writing

Writing in certain standard forms is a


feature of all courses like this. But in this
MA we have conceived a new function for
student writing. We think it is a medium
just as exciting as design itself. And so we
encourage students to use it as a tool of
discovery, as a live not neutral medium,
which can express profound meanings
of which the writer may be only dimly
aware to start with.
Students
Our students have come from around
the world, to date from Austria, Croatia,
Germany, Greece, India, Indonesia, Italy,
Norway, Romania and the USA as well
as Britain. Some are recent graduates of
the Schools architecture courses, some
are graphic designers, photographers,
television producers, filmmakers,
social workers or architects in practice.
So there is a range of ages from just
graduated students to professionals with
considerable experience of the grown
up world. They come with a variety of
purposes: to deepen their understanding
of the activity they intend to make their
lifes work, to pursue a longstanding
personal interest in a more structured
way, to widen their intellectual field, to
develop as writers with the intention
of pursuing a career in journalism or
publishing.

Histories
Theories
Interpretations
Cinema and the city
Concepts of space
Poetry and architecture
The forgetting of air
The question of technology

86

MA Architecture and
Digital Design Systems
Tutors:
Steve Hardy
Jonas Lundberg
(Urban Future Organization)

87

Parametric Permacultures
MA in Architecture and Digital Design
System has continued its collaboration
with UnitFOUR and continues to
experiment with digital design tools and
techniques that allow multiple iterations
of a concept to be examined within given
social, political, ecological, urban and
economic contexts.

1/2. Amina Hussein


3. Marcos Alonzo
4/5. Gustav Fagerstrom

The students have engaged with


generative, associative or parametric
modelling techniques which aim to
develop and formalise the relationships
between multiple design constraints and
variables. The propositions have been
tested in digital simulations and prepared
for digital prototyping and manufacture.
The students of the course have developed
their own project briefs with the
constraint that they should attempt to
formalise the performance in relationship
to natural ecologies and phenomena.
3

88

MA Architecture of Rapid
Change and Scarce Resources
Tutor:
Sumita Sinha

89

This course focuses on an emergent area


within the practice of architecture. It
examines and extends knowledge of the
physical and cultural influences on the
continuous everyday production of the built
environment.
Students rehearse tools and techniques
to enable individuals and communities to
transform the places and spaces which they
2
inhabit. The course focuses on situations
where resources are scarce and where both
culture and technology are in a state of
rapid change.
The course is design based and demand
led. The ability to produce appropriate
design ideas in situations of rapid change
is increasingly relevant whether in the field
of disaster relief (Asian tsunami/Pakistani
earthquake/Kosovan war) or longer term
development work.

1&2. Judith Ben-Tovim, study


of houses built/used by
waste-pickers in Delhi
35. Marco Sosa, study of
Nomadic community,
Marwari Basti, Agra

The course introduces students to a


broad understanding of the knowledge
necessary for the sustainable construction
of domestic and community buildings
using self-help techniques of construction,
adaptation, repair and management.
It offers transferable skills, which will
enhance the students employability within
the development sector of the profession
and introduces them to ways of working
which will give confidence for working
in the wider built environment sector.
The course includes a two week field trip
to a situation of rapid change and scarce
resources. Recent field trips have been
to Delhi, Gujarat and Kosovo. The course
also includes a 4 day full size modelling
workshop at the Centre for Alternative
Technology, Wales.

This is the only architecture and


development course that is fully design
focused and offers a Masters qualification.
The course programme is distinctive
for being based on involvement with
a real situation - via extended field
research and contacts with a local
school of architecture and participating
NGOs. Direct engagement in the field
is a fundamental part of the course,
generating research material on which the
design elements of the course are based as
well as providing opportunities for further
subject specific research which can lead
to work at PhD level.
3

By developing their contacts during


the year students can continue their
involvement with live programmes after
graduation. Following the success of
the work previously undertaken within
Professional Diploma Unit 6, funding has
been received for the establishment of The
Water Trust. This funding is specifically
available to enable post-course support
for some programmes, which have been
initiated during the course. Currently
approval has been gained from the
Metropolitan Corporation of Delhi to
initiate a slum upgrading project in the
Soame Nagar JJ camp in South Delhi.
This project is run through the projects
office at ASD, and will form the basis
for research work within the MA and
an opportunity for employment post
qualification.

Many post graduates of schools of


architecture spend a few years after
graduation working in the developing
world to gain valuable experience with
more responsibility than they would have
in the UK. ASD has placed a number of
UK students in such work with an NGO
(Development Workshop) and with practices
in Delhi. Maurice Mitchell has worked as
the architectural advisor for Voluntary
Service Overseas. Post graduate students
also wish to work in alternative (technology/
energy) or more hands-on situations than
are available in main stream employment.
This course will prepare graduates for such
work and thus offers entry into a distinct
career path within architecture and the
built environment.
5

91 Running Head

MSc in Architecture,
Energy and Sustainability
MSc in the Integration of
Renewable Energies in Buildings
Tutors:
Mike Wilson
Fergus Nicol
Mick Hutchins
Axel Jacobs
Luisa Brotas
Marc Zanchetta
Jon Walker
Mark Standeven
Chris Martin
Eliza Southwood

These courses in low energy design are


tailored for professionals working in the
built environment in an international
context. If you are an architect or building
professional, this course provides you
with a practical and theoretical grounding
in the subject. You will develop skills in
a range of different methodologies for
evaluating environmental conditions and
predicting the effects of design solutions
on energy consumption: these include
data collection, interpretation methods
and computer-based simulations of
buildings.
You will undertake practical studies in the
field, setting up live monitoring projects
working with real buildings and real data.
Environmental simulation programmes
are introduced and used within the
course. This work is set within a
framework of low energy design principles
and against a background of sometimes
conflicting theories of sustainability.
Both courses follow the same syllabus
but those opting for the Integration of
Renewable Energies in Buildings either
undertake two taught modules or the
thesis at a choice of other European
Universities in architecture or engineering
schools ( Athens, UPC( Barcelona),
Florence, La Rochelle, Porto).

Tutors
Liz Adams
Elena Aparicio Mainar
Hektor Arkomanis
Adrian Ashby
Joseph Ashmore
Steve Baker
Denis Balent
Robert Barnes
Matthew Barnett-Howland
Matthew Barton
Stephen Baty
Peter Karl Becher
Catrina Beevor
Florian Beigel
David Bennett
Andris Berzins
Harbinder Birdi
Nick Boulter
Duncan Bowie
Jon Broome
Nick Boulter
Luisa Brotas
Patricia Brown
Raoul Bunschoten
Jeni Burnell
Stuart Cameron
Aleksander Catina
David Chisholm
Phil Christou
Stefano Ciurlo-Walker
Andrew Clifford
Stuart Colum
Celine Condorelli
Alan Conisbee
Matthew Cornford
Tom Coward
Nerma Cridge
Elizabeth Davis
Ron Davis
Colin Davies
Pierre DAvoine
Nikolai Delvendahl
Sandra Denicke-Polcher
Eduardo De Oliveira-Barata
Alex De Rijke
Liam Dewar
Gabriel Djilali
Wendy Donald
Steve Eastman
Rabih El Fadel
Alex Ely
Tom Emerson
Peter Fattinger
Bernd Felsinger
Ian Ferguson
James Firman
Chris Foges
Max Fordham
Robert Franck
Carl Fraser
Daisy Froud
Frank Furrer
Francesca Galeazzi
Martino Gamper
Martina Geccelli
Pablo Gil
Chris Gilbert
Julika Gittner
John Glew
Christina Godiksen

Jorge Godoy
Annika Grafweg
David Grandorge
Andrew Greig
Emily Greeves
Timo Haedrich
James Handley
Usman Haque
Bob Harbison
Steve Hardy
Cathy Hawley
Rex Henry
Frances Hollis
Ingrid Hora
Chris Hosegood
Andrew Houlton
David Howarth
Michael Howe
Ben Humphries
Karsten Hunek
Michael Hutchins
Nick Irving
Bruce Irwin
Jane Jackson
Cat Jeffcock
Dann Jessen
Geraint John
Jillian Jones
Nathan Jones
Mary Kelly
Adam Khan
Torange Khonsari
Melissa Kinnear
Joseph Kohlmaier
David Kohn
Karin Kubaschewski
Vincent Lacovara
Peter Laidler
Julian Lewis
Juan Linares
Graham Ling
Judith Lsing
Tania Lopez Winkler
Marie Lund
Jonas Lundberg
Steve McAdam
Justin McGuirk
Gordon MacLaren
Toby Maclean
Jrg Majer
Helen Mallinson
William Mann
Petra Marguc
Anne Markey
Chris Martin
Andrew Matthews
Walter Menteth
Inigo Minns
Maurice Mitchell
Robin Monotti Graziadei
Sarah Moore
William Muir
Robert Mull
Nicola Murphy
Rose Nag
Christian Nold
Pepijn Nolet
Christina Norton
Rik Nys
Femi Oresanya
Angie Pascoe
Robert Peters

Sara-Ellen Petersen
Doina Petrescu
Brendan Phelan
David Pierce
Cheryl Pilliner-Reeves
Hareth Pochee
Marco Poleto
Francesca Pont
Juliet Quintero
Michael Rieper
Glenda Rivetti
Chi Roberts
Daniel Rosbottom
Gregory Ross
Henrik Rothe
Janet Rudge
Alexander Schellow
Reene Searle
Daniel Serafimovski
Jon Shanks
Geoff Shearcroft
Onkar Singh Kular
Sumita Sinha
Maria Smith
Timothy Smith
Eliza Southwood
Mark Standeven
Andy Stone
Sabine Storp
Michael Sutcliffe
Yannick Sutter
Derek Taylor
Stephen Taylor
Marloes Ten Bhmer
Korrina Thielen
Jonathan Thomas
Silvia Ullmeyer
Sophie Ungerer
Carsten Vellguth
Artur Viveiros
Jon Walker
Soo Ware
Alex Warnock-Smith
Martin Waters
Matthew Watts
Stephanie Webs
Ines Weizman
Jane Wernick
Nathan Wheatley
William Whitby
Chantal Wilkinson
Ant Wilson
Mike Wilson
Anthony Wise
Katherine Wood
Ellis Woodman
Richard Woods
Jonathan Woolf
Andrew Yau
Paolo Zaide
Marc Zanchetta

Students

Foundation Diploma
Gawel Aleksandrowicz
Charikleia Anastasiou
Sadra Ansari
Terrence Baptiste
Jeannie Carr Lopez
Daron Christie
Dang Dao
Megan Duddridge
Huseyin Ergisi
Kamila Faber
Andrea Gillow Kloster
Serena Gustave
Catherine Gyenning
Abdulqadir Hussein
Donna Jones
Agata Madurowicz
Michael Ohanlon
Mariya Peeva
Emma Persson
Lex Quiambao
Daniel Salhotra
Andrew Spyrou
Nobuki Takagawa
Ibrahim Tum
Long Yip

BA Architecture
Hasan Abbas
Zara Agha
Humma Akram
Olcay Aksu
Rolando Andreou
Omar Ashraf
Chloi Athanasopoulou
Dana Al Awami
Ignacio Azpiazu
Joanna Bartkowska
Janeth Bedoya
Alan Benzie
Phuntsok Bhutia
Bernard Biggs
Linda Bjorling
Mohammad BorhaniHaghighi
Christos Brewster
Kevin Brewster
Nicole Bruun-Meyer
Darja Buhanovska
Anton Burdeinyj
Tim Burton
Alejandro Bustillo
Simon Campbell
Sophia Ceneda
Charles Chambers
Suphawadee Chanprasong
Zita Chen
Dan Clark
Candace Clarke
Roo Collins
Jonathan Connolly
Sara Dabouni
Dennis De LOs Rios Oakes
Yiorgios Demetriou

Todor Demirov
John Diaz
Nina Diaz-Otia
Guillaume Dijon
Dermitzaki Dimitra
Krassimire Dimov
Jevgenia Dmitrijeva
Elodie Drissi
Tidza Duderija Karup
Julie Dumont
Kevin Ega-Bourgeois
Emma Ellis
Shareen Elnaschie
Francesco Farci
Tania Ferreira
Vasiliki Filippidi
William Fisher
Rebecca Fode
Mary Fryer
Christopher Fulford
Sophie Gardiner
Jakob Gate
Alexander Gazetas
Maria Georgakaki
George Gingell
Jade Glover
Julia Glyn-Pickett
Marzyeh Gomary
Dalkeith Green
Simona Grimaldi
Yannick Guillen Sloma
Sakineh Hajijan
Civita Halim
Craig Harrison-Smith
Chris Heal
Sahra Hersi
Cindy Hidalgo Reyes
Sarah Hollis
Huy Hong
Rajaul Hoque
Wei Hou
John Jack
Maxine Jackson
Suldan Jama
Andrew James
Vera Janakievska
Martin Johnson
Emmanouil Kakleidakis
Paul Keedwell
Amani Kelifa
Stephen Kennelly
Zara Khan
Johnny King
Jessica Klein
Marie Kojzar
Evangelos Kolokotronis
Unsal Konar
Nikolaos Kostaras
Katalin Kovago
Viktoria Kovalevskaya
Barbara Kowalska
Robert Kwolek
Maximilian Lacey
Marco Laconi
Montether LaftA
John Laide
Georgia Lampoura
Domantas Lape
Andrew Laurie
Chun Lee
Angelia Lesmana
Jie Li

Paul Little
Bronwen Loftus
Helena Marconell
Christian Mc Donald
George Mccormack
Myrabel Menis
Suheb Miah
Linda Mirtcheva
Dana Mohammed
Paul Moorton
Kenneth Murphy
Dean Myers
Liam Nabb
Yosuke Nakano
Gordon Ngai
Kristin Nilsen
Noah Nyholm
James Oakley
Rivo Oeselg
Michal Oglaza
Masaya Ohira
Zuzanna Oledzka
Olusola Osayemi
Alec Owen
Susannah Pain
Christian Palmer
Elina Panagiotopoulou
Leandros Panousopoulos
Seung Park
MicHael Pearcy
Maria Peralta
Emmanouil Pertselakis
Anna Piasecka
Sarah Pine
Huari Pinto Fernandes Da
Silva
Sinan Pirie
Nikolaos Potouridis
Anthony Powell
Tony Powell
Dominic Rago- Verdi
Zeinab Rahal
Samantha Rance
Gbenga Rasaq
Sanna Rautio
Virkanchan Rayat
Paul Reynolds
Richard Roberts
Edouard Rochet
Jamie Rosso
Thomas Rowland
Glen Rust
Owen Rutter
Valerie Saavedra
Orlando Salamanca Torres
Atik Sami
Daniel Sanders
Hawar Sargalo
Bogna Sarosiek
Martin Savage
Eliane Schmidt-Antunes
Kamal Shah
Fatima Shareef
Nick Silk
Philip Simpson
Oluwatobi Sofela
Mette Sorensen
Luke Spencer
Victoria Summers
Caroline Svennerstedt
Pavol Svihra
Facundo Taborda Gauna

Daniel Tambling
Aristeidis Theodoropoulos
Aleksandra Thomalla
Henry Thorold
Sabina Tomalik
Su-Ling Tseng
Jonathan Turney
Magdalena Tym
Leopoldine Van Daalen
Luis Venancio De Oliveira
Darta Viksna
Peter Von Essen
Eleanor Ward
Michael Wass
Paul Watson
Viktor Westerdahl
Lianne Whitaker
Michael Whitehead
Natalie Wills
Jonathan Wilson
Christine Wong
Gemma Wood
Kin Yeung
MotohAru Yokoyama
Etsuko Yokoyama
Adela Zahab
Daria Zakrzewska
Hamid Zendehpir
Marta Grau Lopez

BA Architecture Studies /
BA Interior Architecture &
Design
Ruhanazlina Ahmad
Seyedeh Alavi Tabatabaei
Sabrina Aqil
Alvin Bendu
Lone Blomhoj
Michelle Camua
Venh Chai
Yu Chan
Briony Clarke
Flora Cselovszki
Renata Dickson-Nwosu
Lucia Diego
Sira Diop
Sara Fernandez Gonzalez
Valerio Fornasini
Emma Freeman
Marianna Gandini
Ruth Ghirmay
Jemimah Graff
Mohammed Gumel
Deeqa Hassan
Rebecka Haymoz
Melanie Hinchcliffe
Hayley Hobbs
Ewelina Hofman
Ashley Hughes
Annisa Jabbour
Inna Kaca
Mahzad Karimi
Alina Kaziunaite
Dawn Keatley
Johannes Kirsch
Elena Kvasniova
Kian Lim
Christian Litz
Karin Lundstrom
Antonio Maggi

Elena Mann
Sophie Mcdonagh
Aleksandra Michalska
Sharanjeet Nandhra
Astria Panayiotou
Nermin- Pasa
Theon Phokeerdoss
Agata Podgajna
Atiyeh Pourmatin
Jolita Prusaityte
Umi Qulatein
Natalie Ramsay
Malgorzata Roczniak
Nadine Schuy
Michaela Sedova
Melina Seibert
Pouneh Shahrestani
Alice Shrestha
Victoria Smith
Adela Stasova
Roman Subin
Anahita Tabatabai-Madani
Maral Tahmasebi
Clemence Tourelle
Edyta Weeks
Lesley Whitewood
Sophia Wolchover
Nyasha Woodley
Nadine Woodthorpe
Ayami Yanagimoto
Muhammad Zuberi

Diploma Arch / MA Arch


Digital Design Systems
/ MA Aid / MA History,
Theory & Interpretation
/ MA Arch Rapid Change
& Scarce Resources /
MA Cities Design &
Regeneration / RIBA
III / MSc Arch Energy
& Sustainability / MSc
Integration of Renewable
Energies In Buildings
Haneida Abu Grein
Xenia Adjoubei
Je Ahn
Suji Ahn
Duccio Aiazzi
Ibrahim Al-Nemeh
Marcos Alonso
Natalia Andriotis
Frances Balaam
Grzegorz Baranski-Furdal
Emily Barnes
Tom Bates
Alexander Baulch
Elizabeth Betterton
Yougesh Bhanote
Alec Borrill
Nicholas Bristow
Mauricio Cabeda Rezende
Andrea Carbogno
Adnan Celikovic
Nuno Che Da Paz
Ming-Wai Cheng
Kok Chong
Yuen Chong
Stephen Chown
Kang Chung

David Cole
Anna Crosby
Emma Curtin
Dexter Dash
Katherine Davis
Jean-Victor De Boer
David De La Mare
Eureka Dela Cruz
ChriStian Dimbleby
Eva Diu
Ashleigh Donaghey
Chris Drummond
Andrew Edgar
Georgina Fall
Benjamin Fallows
Christopher Fletcher
Christopher Foley
Dario Forte
Richard Gatti
Anna Gentzel
Francesca Giannuzzi
Haakon Gittins
Rachel Glass
Hardi Gomda
Alexander Gore
Marta Gradaille
Anna Grant
Christopher Gray
David Grunberg
Mustafa Gur
Linda Gustafson
Peter Hall
Angela Halman
Matthew Halsall
Stephen Harker
Chung Yin Ho
Naima Hosni
Rachel Howarth
Chihming Huang
Wojciech Hydzik
Sadiqa Jabbar
Hollie Jackson
Jan Janecek
JameS Johnson
Alasdair Jones
Clinton Jordaan
Tomoko Kakita
Mayuko Kanasugi
Ilgi Karaaslan
Anna Kerrane
Charlotte Khatso
Caroline Khoo
Davood Kiani Khalkhali
Awot Kibrom
Carissa King
Mustafa Koc
Nisha Kurian
Thomas Legg
Tzu-Li Lin
James Lloyd-Mostyn
Victoria Loh
John Lord-Attivor
Raul Lourenco
John Lovatt
Jonathan Lovekin
Jonathan Lovelace
Johnny Lung
Niko Lutener
Philip Lyons
Nicolas Maari
Salman Mahmed
Margaritte Marin Ezpeleta

Rachael Marshall
Jonathan Mawer
Robert Mc Cluskey
Donald Mccrory
Alison Mcdonald
AlExander Mcpherson
Julian Merille
Giuseppe Messina
Alessandro Milani
Charlotte Mockridge
Tze-Ting Mok
Antonio Monserrat
Cristina Monteiro
George Morgan
Susan Morgan
Kirk Morrison
Azadeh Mosavi
Julie Moss
Marian Mulligan
Michael Na
Michalis Neofytou
Mark Newstead
Fung Ngan
James Nichols
Aya Okada
David Osborn
Spencer Owen
Anna Page
Aggeliki Pantelidou
Adonis Papakirykos
Hong Young Park
Shamoon Patwari
Edwhite Pe
Daniel Pedley
Raphael Pennekamp
Tabitha Pope
Jolyon Price
Patrick Quinn
Hoseinali Rahbari
Ummar RaShid
Caroline Raudnitz
Paul Rawson
Nicola Read
Stefanie Rhodes
Edward Ridge
Jacob Ripper
Christopher Robeller
Thidaa Roberts
Fin Robertson
Francisco Rodriguez
Perez-Curiel
Spencer Rose
John Ross
Thomas Routh
Isabelle Rowan
Amelia Rule
Lorna Ryan
Matthew Sanders
Charlotte Seymour
Keigo Shinada
Iain Smales
Maria Smith
Mark Smith
Benjamin Smith
Gardar Snaebjornsson
Marco Sosa
Nicholas Stephenson
Barbara Stewart
James Stopps
Christopher Storie
Dean Ho See Swan
Roman Szczepaniak

Bo Tang
Michael Tarring
Gemma TayLor
Anja Telscher
Anja Thies
Ian Thody
Alexander Thomas
Helen Thomas
Fitzgerald Tibi
Alexander Tsangarides
Stefanie Van Den Brandt
Victoria Voivonda
Leo Ward
Dieo Weeranarawat
Colin Wharry
Matthew Whittaker
William Wiesner
Kirk Wilde
Joshua Williams
Jonathan Witherow
Kwun Hang Wu
Heidi Yeo
Marcos Zotes Lopez

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