Doctor, Doctor!

At a degree congregation held at the University of Sheffield in December, Debabardhan Upadhyaya was presented with a Doctorate for his thesis entitled “Changing Paradigms in Evolving City Centres” supervised by Eamonn Canniffe. Among other places the thesis explored the city of Mumbai which features in the attached short film. Dr. Upadhyaya will also be contributing a chapter on Mumbai to the book ”The City Past and Present: Global perspectives on urban history and change” to be published by Ashgate in 2008. Student and supervisor are pictured outside their former workplace, The Arts Tower, home of the University of Sheffield School of Architecture.

THE FILM

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Folded Concrete

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There are few reasons to visit Leyland in Lancashire these days: the qualities of the original village were long ago submerged in Central Lancastrian suburban sprawl. One fine product of the population expansion was the Roman Catholic Church of St Mary (1959-1964), the product of a visionary priest and ecclesiastical architects at the top of their game. The priest went to Europe to observe new tendencies in church design and produced a model of an octagonal church centred on the altar.

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The finished building combines circular geometry, expressed concrete and fine art works, including shards of stained glass set in a brutal concrete tracery, with a spacious plan consisting of an ambulatory encircling the central, dished space. The generosity of the plan is matched by the exterior space with its piazza and campanile. Architect: Jerzy Faczynski of Weightman & Bullen, Liverpool.

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Plan: Blessed Sacrament Chapel to the left, entrance porch to the right

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The Ambulatory

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Campanile, Piazza, Church

Posted in Churches, CiA, Dominic Roberts, Preston | 2 Comments

Dalibor Vesely and The Vertical City

Dalibor Vesely, Honorary Professorial Fellow at Manchester School of Architecture and 2006 Winner of the Annie Spink Award for Excellence in Architectural Education, will deliver a lecture entitled

THE VERTICAL CITY: CHOICE OR DESTINY

6.00 PM ON THURSDAY 15 MARCH
AT MANCHESTER SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
ROOM 303 CHATHAM BUILDING

The lecture is open to students, staff, practitioners and public. Places are limited so please register by ‘phoning Yvonne Baum on 0161 247 6950 or email y.baum@mmu.ac.uk

Book: Architecture in the Age of Divided Representation by Dalibor Vesely

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“Thinking Inside the Box”

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Dr Charles Rice,, University Of Technology, Sydney

“Thinking Inside the Box: Interiors in the 21st Century – New Visions, New Horizons & New Challenges”, was held on the 1st and 2nd March at the Lighthouse Architecture Centre in Glasgow. It was organised by a collective of Scottish academics and was the first of what will hopefully be an annual event.

In an extremely intense couple of days, delegates from around the world debated the quality and character of interiors. The actual definition of the subject was discussed, the differences and similarities between interior architecture, design and decoration were deliberated upon, the influences of relevant and not so relevant historians and theoreticians were examined as well as the practical issues of education.

There were twenty-four presentations, and all were relevant and informative: Sally Stone (Manchester) and Graeme Brooker (Manchester) kicked off the event with a stirring keynote address, a discussion of the theoretical linked ideas that contextualism and installation art have with interior architecture. The other keynote speaker, Shashi Caan (Shashi Caan Collective, New York), discussed the importance of “place” rather than just “space” within the design of interiors.

Susie Attiwill (Melbourne) discussed the findings of the forum held in Melbourne late last year, the possibility or not that a significant collection or canon of interiors exists. C. Thomas Mitchell (Indiana) and Gennaro Postiglione (Milan) discussed the identity crisis (or not) within the subject and Andrew Stone (London) proposed that interiors are constructed from “…a coincidence of contexts”.

Patrick Hannay (Cardiff) despaired of the way forward for the education of interior architects and Lois Weinthal (New York), Mark Taylor (Wellington), Ro Spankie (Oxford Brooks), Saltuk Ozemir (Istanbul), Teresa Hoskins (Brighton), Julia Dwyer (Brighton) and José Bernardi (Arizona) presented papers based upon educational projects. Still on academic issues, Lynn Chalmers and Susan Close (both Manitober), Charles Rice (Sydney) and Luis Diaz (Brighton) discussed the problems of defining a theoretical basis for the subject.

There were a number of idiosyncratic and particular presentations, among them Gini Lee (Adelaide) talked poetically of the emergence of the “unreliable museum”. John Brown (Calgary) in a very charismatic presentation, described the advent of the “slow home” a reaction to the huge sprawling housing developments that are being constructed, just as slow food is a response to fast food. George Verghese (Sydney) pleaded for more consideration to be given to materials arguing that “…the handling of materials creates a sense of place”. Lorraine Farrally (Portsmouth) described techniques that allow a translation of physical activity into the mapping space. Tara Roscoe (New York) discussed the relationship between cyber and physical space; and how the use of the theoretical ideas that underpin our notions of the security and sacrilege of the home, are being used to destroy or defile houses within extreme environments was very movingly examined by Terry Meade (Brighton).

The symposium was, as the organisers hoped, both stimulating and challenging. We are looking forward to next summer’s event in Edinburgh.

Interiors Forum Scotland
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What is it about traditional spaces which is so adaptable to cutting-edge software?

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Could it be that the lessons such piazze contain present an exemplary type of public space which demonstrates that variety, flexibility, historical memory and contemporary aspiration, the most everyday events and the most sacred spaces might be layered into each other and create richly inspirational spaces which continue to demonstrate the importance of the physical experience in terms of the authenticity of the familiar and the directness of sensation?

Link to Miragestudio on Photosynth

Posted in Aventinus, CiA, Italy, Venice | 1 Comment

Blackburn, Lancashire

Happy Christmas

Blackburn Cathedral has just received planning permission for a project which involves the construction of Clergy apartments, a new Deanery, offices and private apartments. The proposed new buildings enclose three new outdoor spaces to the south of the Cathedral. The drawing (elevational study of the Cathedral, the new Deanery and the new Canons’ Tower) is by Dominic Roberts of Francis Roberts Architects in Preston, the designers of the scheme.

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MSA Field Trip Films

Year 3 students have just completed presentation to Eamonn Canniffe of their Semester 1 Humanities submissions – films of buildings they visited and studied during their autumn 2006 fieldtrips in Europe. The first group of films have been posted on the web. Please visit, comment and share. More will be posted soon.

Click here for MSA Field Trip Films

Posted in CiA, Mitteleuropa, Sally Stone, Student Projects, Travel | Comments Off on MSA Field Trip Films

The Mass-Observation Movement

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The New Yorker has published yet another interesting and relevant article. In his discussion of the Mass Observation Movement Caleb Crain describes how, during the 1930’s and 40’s hundreds of observers recorded the everyday habits, actions and attitudes of the ordinary person. “No detail was too trivial. Mass-Observation studied which end of a cigarette people tap before lighting it (57% of people tap the end they put in their mouths)”.

The inventors of the movement were anthropologists, poets and painters and had strong links with the Surrealist movement and yet from these fantastic beginnings the movement eventually became incorporated into the most respectable of activities, market research.

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Architettura Sostenibile

A new project by Bolles + Wilson at Monteluce, Perugia. Link to ‘Architettura Sostenibile’.

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Hidden Rooms

Our friends at ARCA have kindly forwarded this article from the New York Times about Secret or Hidden Rooms. The piece brings to mind the Priest Hole, a term given to hiding places built into many of the principal Catholic houses of England during the period when Roman Catholics were persecuted in England.

As John Lee at ARCA asks: “Where would you put yours?”

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Thinking Inside the Box: Interiors in the 21st Century – New Visions, New Horizons & New Challenges

Interior Architecture, Design and Decoration is a growing intellectual discipline, as the subject has become more accessible and highly visible so it has become more respectable and is now considered as a subject in its own right rather that an adjunct to architecture or an extension of decoration. The study of the discipline is so often dogged with issues of decorative finishes and cut MDF. Interiors are frequently regarded as the forgotten elements within a much larger theoretical discussion, as the spaces left over and produced very much as a consequence of building exterior. It has been regarded as a superficial practice that lacks a particular set of distinct design theories or principles, but there are more than 100 interior design and interior architecture courses listed on the UCAS website in Britain as well as the subject specialism in architecture. It is extraordinary that is there very little academic writing on the subject

The Interiors Forum Scotland will be debating the identity and future of Interior Design at a two-day symposium at the beginning of March 2007. Issues of theory, identity, design, and practice will be discussed at the Lighthouse Gallery in Glasgow. The event is organised by a collective group of Scottish Interior Educators. The Keynote speakers include Sally Stone, the leader of the College of Continuity in Architecture, MSA and Graeme Brooker, Course Leader Interior Design, MMU. This should prove to be an interesting conference.

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City, Architecture, Fashion – undercover

OMA’s Prada store features in the following samizdat report by the hardened fashionistas of Manchester School of Architecture Year 3…

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