Episode 34. AJ Climate Champions with Hattie Hartman. Glasgow climate activist Scott McAulay and ACAN’s Rosie Murphy advocate for a curriculum which empowers students as changemakers.
McAulay, founder of the virtual Anthropocene Architecture School, argues that the answer to every brief should not be a new building. Architects must rethink their role as stewards of the built environment rather than designers, and students should be taught to scrutinise a brief in its larger context. Perhaps a vacant or underutilised building nearby can be transformed to meet a client’s needs.
For show notes to this episode, go to www.architectsjournal.co.uk/podcasts
In association with Velux
Thamesmead Waterfront and Home of 2030, two competitions wins where ‘landscape is the glue’
Landscape architect Jo Gibbons on why trees matter, urban forestry and greening our cities
Barnabas Calder revisits architectural history through the lens of energy and climate
Guy Shrubsole on rewilding Britain and greening our cities
Steve Webb & Wilf Meynell: ‘We’re brainwashed into steel and concrete mode’
Harry Paticas on empowering communities through the low-carbon retrofit of primary schools
Owen Hatherley on Modernism + Will Hurst explains RetroFirst (bonus episode)
Anna Heringer: 'You can build with clay in a very modern way'
Sarah Wigglesworth: 'Sustainable architecture is fantastically creative'
Haworth Tompkins' Diana Dina: 'We want to share ideas with other practices'
Sofie Pelsmakers: 'Sustainable architecture is "architecture on steroids" – it needs to perform'
Annalie Riches: 'We need more projects that show sustainable design isn't ugly'
Maria Smith: 'It's depressing how much architects are the problem'
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