LAS 2020-2021

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2020 - 2021

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The Liverpool Architectural Society 2020 - 2021

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2021 © The Liverpool Architectural Society, authors The Merseyside Branch of the Royal Institute of British Architects This document has been prepared by the LAS as a summary of events occurring during the presidency of Dan Robinson, 2019 - 2021 Written by Samuel Kumar www.liverpoolarchitecture.com @liverpoolarcsoc Cover - The New Normal Architectural Competition Submission: ‘The Reoccurring Appearance of The Bubble’ - Evgenia Dickins, 2021


Contents Prologue 6. The New Normal - Shortlist 14. The New Normal - Winners 30. LAS Student Awards 48. LAS Events 88.

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Prologue There is of course no need for me to say, that the last 18 months have been difficult. The pandemic has taken lives and livelihoods, strained our relationships and our wellbeing, tested our fortitude while we endure isolation - both physical and mental. At times we became optimistic, and assumed a return to our previous day to day was impending. Alas, the return to normality has instead felt like an Olympic table tennis final - with a seemingly impossible yet entirely real violent back and forth between covid and normality. I write this on the 22nd of July, only a few days after the supposed ‘freedom day’. I expect by the time you are reading this prologue, the impending return to normality has been disappointing once again though let me assure you the rest of this book is much more optimistic than my current tone! Despite the last 18 months, and the continuous meander through restrictions and liberties, architecture has endured, and is thriving. The overwhelming need to respond to the pandemic, in the way we learn, practice, deliver, and enjoy architecture has only increased our creativity and problem solving. Crisis and restriction always results in innovation. Having left Liverpool John Moores University in June 2020, and began my first placement in practice in January 2021, I have come to witness (as we all have) first hand the sheer impact and desolation the pandemic has left in its wake. I have also witnessed the endurance first hand - in the students, tutors, and practitioners I learnt from and work with. Though I have only a relatively short experience of the field of architecture, I have (through the context of the last year) come to conclude that architects as a breed are rather stubborn (if you disagree then I’m afraid you will find yourself in a catch 22 situation). And in this stubbornness, is a determination to carry on despite the sometimes overwhelming adversity whether from man or in this case micro-organisms. This endurance and determination to carry on is most prevalent in the work and projects produced by students from the University of Liverpool, and Liverpool John Moores. I was fortunate to enjoy the privilege of face to face teaching for the majority of my 3rd year, before the lockdown in March 2020. Students from the most recent academic year were not so fortunate, however their work continues to be of a high quality.

Upon leaving university in June 2020 I expected (rather naively) to fall into a placement with only the highest calibre of architect in the country. Case rates at the time were considerably low and optimism was high - why shouldn’t I find a job easily? 4 months and 107 unsuccessful applications, emails, and letters later, my attitude was understandably rather different. Though I felt isolated, I came to realise I was not alone. In fact, swathes of students, graduates, and architects both young and senior shared this inescapable reality of unsuccessful job hunting. Through this reckoning, I came to question how to best use my time while searching for employment. How can I, and others in similar positions, engage with architecture and develop the skills we grow in practice, while searching for a job? Out of this, the New Normal Architectural Competition was born. The competition was initially developed as a pragmatic means to develop student’s and Architect’s portfolio, CV, and points of discussion applicable at interview. Engage in a fun project while you look for a job, and come away as a stronger candidate for vacancies. As the brief was written, and advice taken from those teaching at the universities, the competition came to grow into less of a generic activity to pass time. Instead, this was the chance to offer solutions to the issues of the world.To respond to the conditions of 2020 and provoke conversation about what we as creatives, designers, and activists can do to make the world a better place. This, amongst other things, is the mandate of The Liverpool Architectural Society (Merseyside branch of the RIBA). To bring people together and discuss ideas for a better world, to support members and students in difficult times, and empower those to create, design, and raise awareness. In the coming pages, shortlisted and winning proposals for the New Normal competition are displayed. The diversity in ideas and response to the brief is refreshing, and indicates the complexity of the issues responded to by each participant. All who entered should be proud of the quality of work produced, and the manner in which potentials for a new future are proposed. As mentioned previously, the quality of process, concept, thought and form present in the work produced by LJMU and UoL is both compelling and exciting.


This considerable understanding of what architecture needs to be in the modern day is further exhibited in the shortlisted projects for the Liverpool Architectural Society Student Awards. The conceptual basis and resolution to which they are developed is fascinating and compelling. Council members of the LAS more often than not are divided on whom should win the student awards - entirely due to strengths present in each project put forward to us by the university. Admittedly judging student’s work on a screen is no comparison to marvelling at months of dedication to a thesis, presented neatly on mounted boards in a studio environment - the smell of UHU and spray mount in the air. In what is a strange turn of events how I dearly miss the chance to linger in spaces with such toxic fumes. I’m sure this is a feeling shared unanimously.

The content of this book is largely design work produced by students from Liverpool Universities. What is evident in the following pages is the sheer talent, skill, and flare that is present in the city of Liverpool. It is therefore a privilege for the LAS, as a society representing all architects from Part I to Director, to display the following work and events as a catalogue of what can be achieved in a time of such uncertainty and doubt. Let us marvel at what we have accomplished in the last 18 months, and continue to move forward with a continued urgency, determination, conviction, endurance, perseverance, and fortitude.

Samuel Kumar

I think I speak on behalf of all Council Members of the LAS when I hope to no longer need to judge or view the work of an architecture student through the pixels of a laptop screen. Upon becoming accustomed to the ‘modern’ ways of working and learning, the themes of endurance, perseverance, fortitude, and determination are again present in the attempt to continue, while we continually tire of virtual calls and speaking to one another while muted. As the Merseyside branch of the RIBA we too have had to persevere and find new ways to support and engage with those in Liverpool. Typically the LAS has prided itself in being an active participant in the architectural community, both in and around Liverpool. In recent years, the LAS has hosted a number of events including CPD, networking events, lectures, building tours, social events and competitions. Toward the end of 2019 and in 2020 we were (in hindsight) fortunate to have held a number of in person events - namely our gin tasting event, annual formal dinner, a number of pub visits and socials, as well as lectures. These events were a significant part of the LAS in cultivating conversation and providing a space for networks to grow, and relationships to be built. Continuing to engage virtually, the LAS in conjunction with RIBA North West, the LYA, Uol and LJMU took part in 3 virtual forums: ‘Going Forward’, ‘ResetRefresh-Restart’ and ‘Employment Forum’, helping to support students during times of uncertainty.

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The New Normal Architectural Competition

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THE NEW NORMAL...?

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© Pricegore


The Design Competition For the ‘The New Normal..?’ design competition, participants were asked to submit proposals for a temporary pavilion, located within the city of Liverpool. Participants were encouraged to design a pavilion that would reflect the potential opportunities, changes, or challenges we might encounter in a post Covid world. At its core, each submission was asked to present a unique perspective of the change in societal needs post Coronavirus pandemic, and resolve and/or respond to this through tectonic formulations. Entrants were asked to consider the effect of the Coronavirus pandemic, and the possible changes we might encounter to our cities. Questions regarding ‘the new normal’ of the built environment continue to sit at the forefront of architectural conversation. As we begin to move toward the end of the pandemic, proposals of a potential future, whether pessimistic or optimistic, represent a significant (and unanswered) topic for discussion in the architectural community. Participants were asked to formulate strong predictions, based on scientific research, questioning the long term impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on society and the built environment. Conceptual submissions were welcomed,however participants were asked to consider a number of factors including size and form, capacity, sustainability, the temporary nature of the pavilion, and the associated structural strategy. Entrants were required to limit their submission to 2A2 sheets, as well as a key image best representing their proposal.

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The Reoccurring Appearance Of The Bubble

Evgenia Dickins Architect

As designers we have to face the challenge of a new social structure. After the pandemic we have learnt to come together again, but the stigma of the virus will remain, so we have to figure out ways to connect and feel safe. During the pandemic we learnt to mind the bubbles. The social distancing bubble. The support bubble. The safety bubble.When creating a new normal we should integrate the past and the future.The 2m of distancing has become the basis of the design as a middleman for the new way of socialising. The structure of the pavilion is a clash of bubbles. There is the common public walkway with sitting and eating areas and private group pods that individual groups can sit at safe distance.

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Biophilic Civic

Molly Jones MArch Student

Biophilic Civic is a public space pavilion that establishes complex and intertwining frameworks whilst producing simple urban public space. With its ability to position itself into any green topography, the freedom of contours allow a free relatively unrestricted design through utilising the space created; such as the leisure Plaza underneath its surface. The bar and restaurant promotes the spaces below the seating a viewing steps. The pavilion in this scenario is positioned in an elevated walkway, but it’s flexibility allows the freedom to be position within Chavasse Park, Liverpool waterfront or Everton Park. It aims to produce a simple outside public space which is freely accessible and is protected from the elements allowing a pleasant socially - distanced experience for all.

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Reconciliation with the Transient Nature of the World

Michela De Dominicis

The post Covid-19 pavilion is a space which emphasises on the transient nature of life and it aims to make it more acceptable. Giving new lease of life to recycled timber, the pavilion is a celebration of the people who endured the pandemic.

Architect

Oceanogrpaher

Darin Grozdev

It is a memorial and a spiritual place beyond religion, founded on human emotions and experience. The pavilion is a place to find closure for those who lost loved ones. It is a contemplative space where people’s personal testimonies can be recorded or shared. Residents of Liverpool and the region would be invited to write on timber slats, and leave photographs or memorable objects and thus inhabit the space with memories. Instead of being dismantled, the pavilion will be burned together with the recorded testimonies of the community. The burn would be a symbolic act of letting go of the past and excepting the new normal.

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The New Normal = The New Slow It has been said that Covid-19 stopped the world in it’s tracks, this is undeniably true. Many experienced loss, yet some gained. Whether this virus affected an individual negatively or positively, it still is unlike anything before. History will never forget this moment in time. However, there is fear that once we clear the ambiguity of this virus, that lives will become fast paced once again and there is a strong sense we will lose something from this. My pavilion is neither a celebration or a memorial in relation to Covid-19, yet a recognition of it. With so many different experiences it is almost near impossible to design something that unites people. However, there is one thing we all experienced together – when the world stopped. The concept is to sit and contemplate in areas that explore depths of light, from the most isolated times of lockdown, to the moments of freedom and joy we experienced. This pavilion should encourage people to slow down again, and take time in their own thoughts by not delving back into the hectic, over-ambitious lifestyle we once lead and to simply breath.

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The New Slow

Isabella Hampton BA Student

The pavilion is neither a celebration or a memorial in relation to Covid-19, yet a recognition of it. There is so many different experiences it is almost near impossible to design something that unites people. However, there is one thing we all experience together - when the world stopped. The concept is to sit and contemplate in areas that explore depths of light, from the most isolated times of lockdown, to the moments of freedom and joy we experienced. This pavilion should encourage people to slow down again, and take time in their own thoughts by not delving back into the hectic, over-ambitious lifestyle we once lead, and to simply breathe.

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The Transition

Ranjaka Kalhara MArch Student

The pavilion is based on the conversion of the community from the critical phase to the adaptive phase of the Covid-19 pandemic. Each individual needs a recovery period for a self realisation. The solitude is something that is witnessed by many in this era. This pavilion is that freedom in the transition stage. Opening up to a vast beauty in the Liverpool waterfront, the pavilion holds the momentum of this ultimate social conversion representing the first step for the post Covid space. Keeping the sort of the restricted freedoms yet connecting beyond the boundaries meant so much to the project.

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The Aliment Algae Well

Sarah Kassim

Many like to think they are the masters of their own world, including their own bodies, but facing up to the mortality prompts us to re-evaluate the limits to our control over our own life. Sadly, Liverpool has had one of the highest mortality rates in the country - the third highest rates of death of any local authority. The Aliment Algae Well is proposed as a conceptual way of designing our future materials or facades. The pavilion is a living micro-algae shelter that not only harvests nutritious foods to help elevate health and linked mental well-being, but also helps clear our CO2 emissions (as if planting trees). The pavilion informs visitors that nature is healing, is a rich source of medicine and should be loved, protected and valued through better or more conscious sustainable solutions.

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Reject Meaningless Excess The every day is to inform and inspire. They who look to superfluous excess are irresponsible. We reject meaningless conceptions of profligacy.

Holly Peplow BA Student

This project was born from this manifesto. Meaning to be inspired by the every day and make it exciting; rejecting inspiration from ‘higher’ or ‘elitist’ sources. Informed from every day occurrences, objects, colours, anthropometrics, the unending persistence and cyclical nature of light and shade, a pavilion proposal for the exhibition of the artist Pascale Sola has been produced. In the context to the Covid outbreak, we have the chance now to reform the way we build in the future, let us reject meaningless access and create a cleaner, less cluttered world. The design is relentlessly contained to a 200 x 200mm grid of recycled light gauge steel components.The simple purity of the grid and its relentless compliance allows for a beautiful repetition, making a fundamental every day element of how we perceive space in the X,Y and Z axis, become more profound and realised, (since the axis are so obvious) where we would usually be oblivious.

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Author’s Favourite Drawing - Shortlist Reject Meaningless Excess Holly Peplow


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The New Normal Architectural Competition Winners

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Baltic Loop Ever-increasing urban populations, excessive consumerism and the subsequent throwaway culture has cause the issue of household waste management to become a key challenge of the 21st century. Exacerbated by the working-from-home constraints enforced during lockdown, the levels of waste produced by UK households has increased dramatically. Just as previous major crises have accelerated significant progressions within society, the issue of waste is one that is imperative to solve - starting at the culmination of the current pandemic.

George Brandon Mathew Magee Daniel Reid MArch Students

The new normal should encourage an uptake in the implementation of alternative, localised waste economies along with increased community participation, responsibility, and craft to utilise waste as a valuable resource. Community participation is primarily by means of the forging of three-dimensional tiles for the pavilions facade from plastic waste collected by participants within the community - targeting the 55% of UK plastic waste that fails to be recycled.

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Virtual-as-Reality Lockdown has isolated us from one another. Looking at our friends only through our phone or laptop screens. It is not the same, we have become lonelier than we could have imagined. The detriments of this loneliness can be long-lasting. Yet, the advent of virtual reality may offer the solution.

Chrisitian Ward Joseph Watkins Callum Allison MArch Students

In these virtual spaces you can interact with someone as you would in the physical world. This pavilion looks to find a solution to the disconnect felt when interacting through the digital. Two of the columns house pods which provide a contemplative space to reflect on the isolation we have endured during the lockdown. The other three allow people to talk across the realities, creating a discussion of whether our world and the virtual one, will eventually become the same. The five columns of the pavilion act as private pods to allow inhabitants to escape reality by interacting with people in the virtual. The pavilion projects people who are in a virtual reality environment onto a screen of water running off the roof when raining, or via water sprayers when not, giving the illusion that a remote VR user is present in the space.

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What Shapes Us... Liverpool is a northern city known for its strong sense of community, culture and passion. Even when faced with a global pandemic the character of the city and its people remains undiluted. ‘What Shapes Us’ is a pavilion project designed to adaptively re-purpose urban public spaces within the city to respond to post pandemic needs of the people and existing infrastructures.

Olivia Dolan Georgina Cantrill MArch Students

Charlotte Keen Part I Architectural Assistant

Lockdown has been a tough time for all, many turned to creative, healthy and fun methods to keep motivated. New business was created, new skills were learned, a new perspective to life gained. The concept of the pavilion is to provide a simple adjustable space to suit the community. Using a set of plywood panels and rope to mould around the surrounding environment. The pavilion focuses on three main topics, community, creative and transportation. These topics were translated into panels providing space for people to fulfil the newly discovered motivations. Using standard plywood sizes we intend for the public to be creative and DIY their own pavilion in their area of Liverpool.

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Author’s Favourite Drawing - Winners Virtual-as-Reality Christian Ward Joseph Watkins Callum Alison


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The New Normal Architectural Competition Judges

Lisa Mcfarlane

Samuel Kumar

Lisa is a RIBA Specialist Conservation Architect and Director of Seven Architecture, as well as a past President of the Manchester Society of Architects.

Samuel is a recent graduate from Liverpool John Moores University, and is currently a Part I Architectural Assistant at Scott Brownrigg.

She is passionate about ensuring sensitive historical buildings can be enjoyed for future generations and has developed specialist expertise in conservation architecture. Her skills are valued throughout the profession and she is a regular judge for the RICS Awards, Civic Trust Awards and for the Conservation Category in the RIBA NW Regional Awards. Lisa also sits on the Manchester City Council Conservation Panel.

Upon leaving university amidst the pandemic, Samuel became passionate about supporting Part Is in a time of uncertainty and reduced opportunity. With the support of the LAS, he began the New Normal competition - building the skills of students whilst highlighting the significant architectural talent present in Liverpool. Samuel continues to participate in the architectural community - recently producing podcasts for RIBA Future Architects.


The quality of work submitted for the New Normal competition was of a high calibre - testament to the talent and skill of architectural students in the Merseyside region. Submissions varied considerably, both in the approach to the brief, as well as the proposals response to the Covid pandemic - no two submissions were alike. This resulted in a range of pavilions that approached the issue of Covid in completely different manner from one another. Because of this, a key topic of debate between the judges when reviewing the projects was the optimism (or lack of) when considering how to live with Covid. Dan Robinson Dan has accumulated over 20 years of experience practising as an Architect in Liverpool - specialising in both the aviation and industrial sector. He has recently founded a new practice - Crusoe Architects. Dan has been president of the Liverpool Architectural Society since 2019, and has actively supported the local architectural community through the organisation of CPD, building tours, networking events and student focused forums. Dan has actively contributed to the education of architectural students in Liverpool through guest reviewing, mentoring, and tutoring at LJMU.

The winning submissions, ‘What Shapes Us’ significantly challenged the judges’ pre conceived notions of what a pavilion could or can be. The manner in which the proposal responded to the brief, and critically responded to the change in people’s lifestyles was both apt and incredibly compelling. The inherent optimism in celebrating and sharing new lifestyles and hobbies forged from isolation, offered a refreshing and hopeful outlook for the future. The judges were very excited by the notion of an infinitely adaptable pavilion that was able to respond specifically to its context (both social and physical), as well as act in a pragmatic yet elegant manner to meet the newly developed needs of the people of Liverpool.

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The Liverpool Architectural Society Student Awards

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LAS Student Awards 2021 Liverpool John Moores University - BA The Liverpool Architectural Society Student Awards are currently in their 5th year of awarding the prize to Liverpool architecture students. The award aims to commend the innovation and creativity present in both the BA and MArch cohorts, from both UoL and LJMU. Both schools of architecture are asked to select a shortlist of projects for consideration - including a mixture of individual and group projects.

Winner: Emma Spencer Shortlist: Charles Hunt James Williams Julia Miroslaw Kuok Fung Ling Regan Jay Lee Will Garrard


The Journey To Serenity Emma Spencer

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Sentai Onsen Regan Jay Lee


Heterogeneously Connected Julia Miroslaw

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The Journey To Submersion Charles Hunt


Opticus - Wirral Society for the Blind Will Garrard

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The Interweave James Williams


The House of Rally Kuok Fung Ling

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Author’s Favourite Drawing - LJMU BA Opticus - Wirral Society for the Blind Will Garrard


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LAS Student Awards 2021 Liverpool John Moores University - MArch Winner: Shafiq Ali Shortlist: Georgia Baldwin Tom Chuter Ryan Davies Dean Deakin Ranjaka Hettiarachchige Rosie Murray Thomas Smith


Dingle Timber Factory Shafiq Ali

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One Earth - Bio Reintroduction Centre Georgia Baldwin


Healthier Roots - Better Eating, Better Health Tom Chuter

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The Brunswick Conservation and Research Centre Ryan Davies


The Social Exchange Dean Deakin

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Tower to the Pier - The Urban Necklace Ranjaka Hettiarachchige


Sound and Vision - Park and Musical Tower Rosie Murray

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The Sustainable Plastic Factory Thomas Smith


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Author’s Favourite Drawing - LJMU MArch One Earth - Bio Reintroduction Centre Georgia Baldwin


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LAS Student Awards 2021 University of Liverpool - BA Winner: Hannah Payne Shortlist: Chen Nuo Heather Woof Jenny Foster James Langlois


The Rialto Youth Project Hannah Payne

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IR Regular Chen Nuo


From Connections to Interactions Heather Woof

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Through The Looking Glass James Langlois


A Student’s Sitopia Jenny Foster

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Author’s Favourite Drawing - UoL BA The Rialto Youth Project Hannah Payne


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LAS Student Awards 2021 University of Liverpool - MArch Winners: Bentoon Boon-Itt Ioana Bucuroiu Tolulope Ogunjimi Shortlist: Tin Shing Tim Tsoi Zhenhao Xu Qinxian Zheng Tianli Zhang Matthew Sharp Scott Millington Eden Harris Jess Arnold Owen Brown Lauren Clancy Lauren Greensill Emma Hartley Kate Johnstone


Sustainable Urbanisation Bangkok Bentoon Boon-Itt Ioana Bucuroiu Tolulope Ogunjimi

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Bird Embassy Tin Shing Tim Tsoi Zhenhao Xu Qinxian Zheng Tianli Zhang


Olympic Carnival Jess Arnold Owen Brown

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Flying Fisheries Matthew Sharp Scott Millington Eden Harris


The Madness of the City Lauren Clancy Lauren Greensill Emma Hartley Kate Johnstone

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Author’s Favourite Drawing - UoL MArch Flying Fisheries Matthew Sharp Scott Millington Eden Harris


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The Liverpool Architectural Society Events 2020 - 2021

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Coming October 2021


Taking place from 04-15 October 2021, the inaurgural festival is focussed, and the rst step to building bigger things. Through a mixture of free to attend lectures, workshops, charrettes, tours, and presentations we will build a community. Architects presenting to architects will allow for the sharing of information, and experiences resulting in a higher level of discource, and ultimately, a better quality built environment for Liverpool. www.laf-uk.com

hello@laf-uk.com

@laf_uk

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Full Circle Podcast Exploring the Architectural Umberella

Ever considered a career in

Architecture?

In this podcast, I talk with practitioners within the industry, not only Architects I deep dive into various roles within the architectural umberella, providing a unique insight into the world of Architecture and the creators that work within its ecosystem. Find out more here: Futhermore, if you would like to be on the podcast get in touch below: @Fullcircle.arch The Full Circle Podcast The Full Circle Podcast Hello@fullcirclepodcast.co.uk


Special Thanks Dan Robinson Samuel Kumar James Jones Philip Lo Jonathan Kinnear Ellie Prichard Charlie Bryant Maria Killick Will Barralet Lizzie Edge Siobhan Twomey Tom Gregory

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2021 © The Liverpool Architectural Society, authors The Merseyside Branch of the Royal Institute of British Architects This document has been prepared by the LAS as a summary of events occurring during the presidency of Dan Robinson, 2019 - 2021 Written by Samuel Kumar www.liverpoolarchitecture.com @liverpoolarcsoc Back Cover - University of Liverpool MArch: ‘One Earth - Bio Reintroduction Centre’ - Georgia Baldwin, 2021


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