Monthly Archive for November, 2009

Announcing the winner of the International Award for Excellence

Congratulations to Olga den Besten, John Horton, Peter Kraftl and Peter Adey, the winners of the International Award for Excellence in the area of design principles and practices for their paper Building a ‘box’: Discourses of School Design in the UK

Abstract: There is currently considerable activity in the UK directed towards the reconstruction or refurbishment of secondary and primary schools. In this context, the paper looks closely at various discourses that evolve around school architecture. The omnipresent discourses at the national level are those of and around Building Schools for the Future (BSF) – a major government school building programme. BSF is presented and perceived as an ambitious project set out to bring radical changes for the better not only to material conditions of schooling, but also to the concept of secondary education itself. However, as the “first waves” of BSF are carried out, reports are emerging in the media that express disappointment with the project. At the local level, we have found, through an in-depth ethnographic research in several British schools, an array of discourses that contribute to the complex decision-making process of creating an individual school building. Such discourses, in which school staff, pupils, architects, consultants or local authorities are engaged, carry with them very concrete implications for the design of material school spaces. For example, a discourse of heritage brought in by the architects in one of our case-studies, resulted in a particular – rectangular – shape of the future school building, which would be congruent with the industrial past of the area where the school is situated. The paper also shows how the national BSF discourses are translated to the local level.

If you have read the paper you may wish to add a review.

Finalists for the International Award for Excellence

Congratulations to all of the International Award for Excellence finalists:

  • Public Participation in Design of Health Empowering Information Systems: An Idealistic Fantasy or Democratic Effect? by Anders Barlach.
  • Culture Clash as Design Curriculum by Mark Biddle, Ann McDonald and Audra Buck-Coleman.
  • Creating Strategy by Design by James Carlopio.
  • A Tale of Two Streets: Comparative Experiences on Streets in the East and West by Vikas Mehta.
  • Classical Period of Australian Indigenous Interiors: Shaping of Space and Interiority by Jacqueline Power.
  • Traces, Relics & X-Rays: The Form of Absence by Paul Robinson (to be published in an upcoming issue)
  • Teachers as Designers of Online Activities: The Role of Socio-Constructivist Pedagogies in Sustaining Implementation by Tamar Shamir-Inbal and Yael Kali.
  • Complexity and Design: How School Architecture Influences Learning by Rena Upitis.
  • Classification and Use of Design Tools: The Roles of Tools in the Architectural Design Process by Lieve Weytjens, Evelien Verdonck and Griet Verbeeck.
  • Trillions: A Short, Thought-provoking Film

    Courtesy of Bill Lucas, from Vimeo.

    Trillions

    This is a short film (a fast paced preview of a larger effort) by MAYA Design created to put some perspective on the invisible but fast approaching challenges and opportunities in the pervasive computing age.

    Please visit this link for more information.

    Really interested in the implications of a trillion-node world? Read Dr. Peter Lucas’s seminal white paper that not only predicted this sort of scaling and complexity but outlined some of the resilient patterns that we need to follow to get there from here.