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Constructing Realities Lecture Series Term 1

14 November 2024–21 November 2024, 1:00 pm–2:00 pm

A group of people around a snooker table in a large, airy gallery space in Jumex Museum, Mexico City

This lecture series invites speakers to explore the design and making of our built environment.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Professor Michael Stacey

Location

Room 400
UCL East Marshgate
7 Sidings Street
London
E20 2AE

The Constructing Realities series invites speakers to explore the design and making of our built environment, examining how invention, creativity, collaboration, and technology are shaping the future of the spaces we live in. Contributors will range from architects, engineers, environmental engineers, façade engineers and material scientists: all practitioners who are at the forefront of their industry or disciplines.
 
This lecture series has the potential to directly inform your practice. It is discursive and offers opportunities for students, stakeholders, professionals and the wider public to learn from and question the people who are constructing the realities we inhabit. 


Schedule

07 October 2024 | 18:30 | Philip Beesley 

Metastable Aether

This lecture will be held 18:30 - 20:00 in G6 LT Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, Bloomsbury

Professor Philip Beesley is one of the global pioneers in living architecture design and research, widely known for his immersive “sentient” physical environments. Since his first experimental presentations, he has worked within collaborative groups. His 2010 Hylozoic Ground project has become a fixture across contemporary international architecture curricula. His current research focuses on the architectural implications of dissipative adaptation and biogenesis at the boundary between mineral and organic realms, revealing fertile qualities. His installations were presented twice at the Venice Biennale for Architecture and are currently touring Europe and Oceania.  A multi-year collaboration with TU Delft reaches across multiple departments and research groups. His collaborations with haute couture designer Iris van Herpen have resulted in 15 collections. 

The lecture will discuss these far-reaching integrative probes include poetic expressions, elemental kits and pattern languages that are providing paradigms, tools and frameworks for the emerging discipline of living architecture.

Can architecture integrate living functions? Could future buildings think, and care? The Living Architecture Systems Group brings together research­ers and industry partners in a multidisciplinary research cluster dedicated to developing built environments with qualities that come close to life. The research of LAS has the potential to change how we build by transform­ing the physical structures that support buildings and the technical systems that control them. 

17 October 2024 | 13:00 | James Timberlake | Room 400, UCL East Marshgate

Fullness

‘the holistic breadth, depth, and synthesis of the elements of architecture’

This lecture will be held 13:00 - 14:00 in Room 400, UCL East Marshgate 

For over four decades, Stephen Kieran and James Timberlake, the founder’s of KieranTimberlake, have pursued a design practice, informed by deep research, providing outcomes to the built environment that have pushed innovation, embraced innovation in practices, procedures, tools and workflows and the integration of systems. Their award-winning architecture has consistently broken boundaries and norms, while resulting in beautiful, sophisticated and useful outcomes. James Timberlake will speak to the depth of these outcomes, using FULLNESS, a book of KieranTimberlake works completed in 2019, including the US Embassy, London, several houses, and renewal projects, and the research and development behind them.

James Timberlake's work reflects his belief in beautifully crafted, thoughtfully made buildings holistically integrated to site, program, and people.

James breaks new ground with projects that explore some of today's most important design topics—among them, innovative construction methods, resource conservation strategies, and novel use of building materials. Examples include the Melvin J. & Claire Levine Hall at the University of Pennsylvania, which employs the first actively ventilated curtainwall of its type in North America; SmartWrap™, a mass-customizable building envelope exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum; Cellophane House™, a fully recyclable, energy-gathering dwelling exhibited at The Museum of Modern Art in New York; and the Embassy of the United States in London, which employs strategies to significantly reduce energy consumption and sets an agenda to achieve carbon neutrality.

Under his guidance, the firm has received nearly 300 design citations, including the AIA Firm Award in 2008 and the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award in 2010. James and partner Stephen Kieran were the inaugural recipients of the Benjamin Latrobe Fellowship for architectural design research from the AIA College of Fellows in 2001. Since 2002, they have co-authored seven books on architecture, including the seminal manifesto refabricating Architecture and their newest monograph, KieranTimberlake: FULLNESS.

In addition to his architectural practice, James has held visiting professorships at the University of Pennsylvania, School of Design, the University of Washington, Yale University, the University of Michigan, and the University of Texas at Austin, among other institutions. In 2012, he was appointed by the Obama Administration to serve on the Board of the National Institute of Building Sciences.

Founded in 1984, KieranTimberlake brings together the experience and talents of over 90 professionals of diverse backgrounds and abilities in a practice that is recognized worldwide. Design, innovation, and invention in architecture form our practice. Projects span educational institutions, civic projects, arts and culture venues, governmental buildings, private residences, and more. We also renovate and transform existing structures and bring historic buildings into the modern era. Research is at the core of and integral to our work on every project. In addition to deep investigations into site, program, climate, ecology, resources, and environment that are seamlessly integrated into the design phase, research projects can be commissioned by clients for specific applications.

14 November 2024 | 13:00 | Andrew Sedgwick | Room 400, UCL East Marshgate

Lighting Art with the Sun and the Sky

This lecture will be held 13:00 - 14:00 in Room 400, UCL East Marshgate 

Artists and visitors like to see fine art displayed under natural light. In many traditional and modern galleries, it also provides character and gives form to the architecture. But daylight’s spectrum and variability can make it a tricky ingredient when designing spaces for light sensitive artworks.

This talk will describe some of the history and science of using daylight in museums and galleries and will use a series of case studies from North America and Europe to examine a variety of approaches to dealing with, and enjoying, the natural variability of daylight.

Andrew Sedgwick has worked for Arup for more than 40 years and has contributed to the design of more than fifty museums and galleries in North America, Europe and the Far East. His particular expertise is the daylighting of fine art museums, and in creating stable environments for the long-term conservation of collections with the minimum use of energy and other resources. His previous projects include Tate Modern (both phases), the Whitney in New York, the Broad in Los Angeles, Louvre Lens and the expansion of the St Louis Art Museum. Recent project completions include Istanbul Modern, Sydney Modern and new galleries at the Royal Academy in London.

Andy is a regular collaborator on museum projects with Renzo Piano Building Workshop, David Chipperfield Architects, Herzog & de Meuron, Diller Scofidio + Renfro and many others. He lectures regularly at architectural schools including The Bartlett, Cooper Union and Cal Poly.

21 November 2024 | 13:00 | José L. Torero | Room 400, UCL East Marshgate

What does it mean to be an architect or an engineer in a post-Grenfell world?

This lecture will be held 13:00 - 14:00 in Room 400, UCL East Marshgate 

What does it mean to be an architect or an engineer in a post-Grenfell world? This presentation will discuss the role of fire safety competency in architecture as defined by the Phase II Grenfell Tower Inquiry report. The role and responsibilities of the architect will be presented and contextualise within the concept of intrinsically safe design.

Professor José L. Torero is Professor Civil Engineering and Head of the Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering at University College London. He works in the field of fire safety where he specializes in complex environments such as complex urban environments, novel architectures, new construction materials, critical infrastructure, aircraft, and spacecraft. José is a Chartered Engineer (UK), a Registered Professional Engineer in Queensland, a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (UK), The Royal Society of Edinburgh (UK), The Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering, the Society of Fire Protection Engineers (USA), the Institution of Fire Engineers (UK) and the Institution of Civil Engineers (UK).


More information

Image: Jumex Museum, Mexico City, David Chipperfield Architects