PhD RESEARCH PROJECTS 2016
PhD RESEARCH PROJECTS 2016
TUESDAY 23 FEBRUARY 2016 Conference: 9.30am–6.30pm The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL 140 Hampstead Road / London
CONTENTS
03 04
06
Preface
20
Presenters
22
Making a ‘Kind-of-Home-Place’
Introduction
24
Contextualising Spaces of Change
Destruction: Tracing the Aerial Viewpoint from Spectacle to Military Sublime
KILLIAN DOHERTY
Exhibitors
Decolonizing Architectural Practice:
Exploring Dwelling and Distinction within
the (Development) Landscapes of Rwanda 10
26
a New Figure for Design
Lighting Technologies in Dance Culture: 28
of Space 12
de Verre through the Large Glass 30
to Solving London’s Housing Crisis? 14
Narrating Political-sectarian Conflict in Contemporary Beirut
Searching for Identity in Damascus through 32
form in Modern Spaces 16
Practice at Grymsdyke Farm 34
21st Century: Critical Devices and Collective 36
EVA SOPEOGLOU
The Tectonics of Comfort between Clothes and Cities 2
MICHAEL WIHART
The Architecture of Soft Machines
Practice, In and Out of Academia 18
GUAN LEE
Cast & Camera: An Architectural
CARLO MENON
‘Little’ Architectural Magazines of the Early
MOHAMAD HAFEDA
Bordering Practices: Negotiating and
NAHED JAWAD
the Muqarnas: a Historical Architectural
EMMA CHEATLE
Part-architecture: the Maison
BILL HODGSON
Can Community Self-building Contribute
ALESSANDRO AYUSO Body Agents: Deploying
POL ESTEVE
A Challenge to the Modern Conception
HENRIETTA WILLIAMS
From Aerostation Wonder to Ultimate
in Amman and Tel Aviv-Jaffa 08
FREYA WALEY-COHEN Permutations
SIGI ATTENEDER
Urban Borderlands in the Levant:
HUDA TAYOB
38
Biographies Credits
PREFACE
Dr Penelope Haralambidou
Co-ordinator, MPhil/PhD Programmes
Professor Jonathan Hill
Director, MPhil/PhD Architectural Design
Dr Barbara Penner
Director, MPhil/PhD Architectural History & Theory
P
hD Research Projects 2016 is the
concluding their research. The purpose of
exhibition related to doctoral research
productive discussions between presenters,
tenth annual conference and
at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. The event is open to the public and involves presentations by students undertaking the
the conference and exhibition is to encourage exhibitors, staff, students, critics and the audience.
Organised and curated by Dr Penelope
MPhil/PhD Architectural Design and MPhil/
Haralambidou, PhD Research Projects 2016
year we have invited contributions by MPhil/
Architectural Association; Professor Murray
PhD Architectural History & Theory. This
PhD students at the Bartlett’s Development
and Planning Unit and the Royal Academy of Music, as a continuation of our collaboration. Furthermore, to celebrate 175 years of
architectural education at UCL we are
hosting an exhibition of work by recent PhD alumni.
Leading to a PhD in Architecture, the
two Bartlett School of Architecture doctoral programmes encourage originality and
has four invited critics: Dr Pier Vittorio Aureli, Fraser, University College London; Dr Hélène Frichot, KTH Royal Institute of Technology; and Professor Neil Heyde, Royal Academy of Music.
Presenting this year are: Sigi Atteneder;
Killian Doherty; Pol Esteve; Bill Hodgson;
Nahed Jawad; Carlo Menon; Eva Sopeoglou; Huda Tayob; Freya Waley-Cohen; and Henrietta Williams.
The five PhD alumni exhibiting this year
creativity. Over 90 students are currently
are: Dr Alessandro Ayuso; Dr Emma Cheatle;
undertaken is broad. However, each annual
Dr Michael Wihart.
enrolled and the range of research subjects PhD conference and exhibition focuses on a smaller selection of presentations from students who are starting, developing or
Dr Mohamad Hafeda; Dr Guan Lee; and
INTRODUCTION
Enter the Margin
T
he 2016 PhD Research Projects
probe into the borderlands and minor spaces
from Architectural Design and
of the body, in and through space.
brings together doctoral researchers
Architectural History & Theory at the
of architecture; and question the positioning A common thread across many of these
Bartlett School of Architecture, alongside
research projects is their location in the
Planning Unit and The Royal Academy of
metaphorically. For bell hooks, the margin
researchers from the Bartlett Development Music. This year, the research conversations coincide with the opening of an exhibition
to mark 175 years of architectural education at UCL. For this special occasion, Bartlett School of Architecture alumni have been
invited to exhibit their work alongside PhD candidates.
As always, the PhD Research projects
presented highlight the interdisciplinary
nature of doctoral research at the Bartlett in form, content, and method. Presenters
and exhibitors work through a broad range of research methodologies, drawing from practices and theories within disciplines
as varied as design, history, mathematics,
visual art, composition, and anthropology,
among others. Researchers are engaged in a search for tools to look, map, design, and
fabricate differently. They investigate the role of institutions and surveillance mechanisms;
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margin - methodologically, physically, or
is a ‘space of radical openness… a profound edge’. As such, it is a space of possibility and potential, a space from which to look ‘both
from the outside in and from the inside out’,
to create and imagine new worlds. In moving between and across disciplines these various research projects confront the realities of
their locations. And through the unstable and shifting worlds of interdisciplinary research, they question and challenge normative
positions, critically evaluate, and search for
alternatives. As bell hooks herself points out, there is nothing new about the margin, yet
the potential it holds remains. Indeed many of the research projects address pertinent underlying social, historical, political, and environmental concerns.
Sigi Atteneder’s research questions
the relational and territorial borderlands of the Levant, while Killian Doherty’s project
searches for an architecture that is ‘neither
while Henrietta Williams’ research traces the
population in Rwanda. Nahed Jawad’s paper
aerial flight, from pleasure to surveillance.
the one nor the other’ through a marginalised draws on the history and mathematics of
history of the omniscient viewpoint through Returning to bell hooks, these research
muqarnas in Damascus in order to challenge
projects invite us to ‘enter the margin’ as a
while Eva Sopeoglou looks to the margins
conversation between and across disciplines,
the generic globalization of architecture,
of architecture and clothing, for new tools and fabrication methods for a sustainable
future. Freya Waley-Cohen and Pol Esteve’s papers both investigate the embodied
relationship of architecture in counterpoint to other disciplines: through Waley-Cohen’s consideration of musical and spatial
composition, and Esteve’s study of dance culture and lighting technologies.
Yet it is not only the margin, but also the
space of possibility. The presenters are in between the centre and the margins of
architecture, between theory and practice,
and between the papers and the exhibition. These are located research projects, which through their specificity hold the potential
to draw one in, critically question, challenge,
and creatively develop. Through the margins and the minor, the 2016 PhD Research
Projects may move us all ‘out of our place’.
minor which is of particular interest here
‘Enter that space. Let us meet there.’
a minor architecture adopting Deleuze and
Huda Tayob
today. Joan Ockman puts forth the idea of Guattari’s notion of minor literature. For
Deleuze and Guattari, the minor, in a similar way to hooks’ margin, holds the potential
for subversion and radical transformation.
Ockman suggests that a minor architecture is therefore not about nostalgic reactions or shock tactics, but rather, about incremental and subtle persistence. Carlo Menon’s
research into ‘little’ architectural magazines in Europe looks into the critical potential of
these architectural publications, while Huda Tayob’s research explores the possibilities
of incremental minor architectures in Cape Town. Ockman further reminds us that the
minor is historically constructed, and always defined in relation to the major. In London, Bill Hodgson searches for tools to find and
inhabit small, leftover, and under-used spaces to confront the housing crisis in the city,
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SIGI ATTENEDER BARTLETT DEVELOPMENT PLANNING UNIT
Urban Borderlands in the Levant: Contextualising Spaces of Change in Amman and Tel Aviv-Jaffa
T
his research project investigates
confrontational spatial situations which
environments. Despite increasingly
separations. Amman and Tel Aviv-Jaffa have
spatial sources of change in urban
complex and interrelated modes of spatial
configuration, change in urban areas is still
largely understood as internal to city spaces. This research however suggests that a
variety of processes, both near and far, are
at play when it comes to the production and reproduction of urban spaces. Addressing
the field of tension between similarity and
difference, and spaces that fold, overlap, and
withdraw, the research conceptualises these
spaces as urban borderlands. The theoretical framework builds on the concept of the
borderland, which extends the concept of borders from the edge of states to wider
spaces. Overall, while following the view of space as open and relational, the project also takes into account the oppositional
attributes of restrictions and separations. The empirical focus of the research
is on the Middle East and the so-called Levant. In this contested region, the
heterogeneity and number of borders,
from conventional state borders to more
intricate mechanisms of control, result in
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oscillate between creating relations and
been selected as the sites of concrete case studies. Through these sites, and between
relational and territorial points of view, I
investigate the different trajectories and
multiple border-mechanisms that reflect
the balance of power. The research method extends beyond comparative approaches,
and seeks to work with cross-scalar contexts that play a role in the reproduction of urban spaces. The premise of the research is that contemporary processes of urban change
span across scales, and that acknowledging and activating spaces produced by
these processes potentially provides the
momentum to work towards more inclusive and just urban spaces.
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KILLIAN DOHERTY BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Decolonizing Architectural Practice: Exploring Dwelling and Distinction within the (Development) Landscapes of Rwanda
I
n sub-Saharan Africa, architecture
and the local building materials of mud and
through the building of institutions.
landscape are being effaced. Development
historically facilitated colonial governance
Jean-François Bayart (1998) asserts that
institutions acted as sites of moral subjectivity thereby reinforcing a distinction between
western as modern/ good and non-western
as primitive/bad. Following Homi K. Bhabha
thatch negated, former relations with the
has thus spurred Rwanda’s indexed vision of modernity resulting in the re-emergence of former moral/ethnic divides of internalized colonialism.
Borrowing Franz Fanon’s (1961) concept
(1991), the influence of western colonialism in
of decolonization, which points to an undoing
of previous social and cultural orders.
questions western developmental influences
subjugating identities resulted in the erosion Contemporary post-conflict Rwanda
is rapidly modernising, heavily assisted by
western development. The architecture and urban forms are legitimised by an imported Singapore-designed master plan, where
generic high-rise concrete buildings occupy zoned divisions of land. In the process,
scattered rural settlements are consolidated into ‘model villages’, while surrounding
fertile land is ring-fenced into economic
programs of tourism, energy and collective agriculture. Yet behind this discourse
of reconciliation and prosperity, 80% of
Rwanda’s population remains dependant
upon access to land for food and shelter. With access to forests and wetlands forbidden,
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of colonial power structures, this research
upon Rwanda. It starts by questioning the
role current architectural practice plays in (unwittingly) depoliticizing non-western
needs. How might alternative approaches
to architecture open spaces for non-western peoples’ concerns? And could a mediated approach, located between western and
non-western cultural positions, give way to
a new architecture, as articulated by Bhabha (1991) that is ‘neither the one nor the other’?
This thesis asks these questions through the societal and physical spaces occupied by
an indigenous, landless community within Rwanda: somewhere between the forest and the ‘modern’ developed nation.
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POL ESTEVE BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Lighting Technologies in Dance Culture: A Challenge to the Modern Conception of Space
I
n 1978, the French semiotician, Roland
sight can be considered to be permanent;
Hommes discussing Le Palace, probably
an intermittent rhythm which rendered
Barthes, published an article in Vogue
the greatest discotheque Paris has ever
known. Le Palace was an old theatre that was transformed into a dance club; it used the
most advanced technologies of the time to
offer a spectacle of colour and light. Barthe’s text described Le Palace as an experience
of pleasure and novelty without precedent: an architecture which incarnated the ever-
in dance culture of the time, light followed the dichotomy between lightness and darkness evident. The interruption of
sight therefore created a non-normative
perceptual framework that dwelt on, and
aimed to trigger, a different understanding
of the body and dispositions of the individual within a changing social and urban geography. This investigation articulates an
present desires of man.
intersection between a history of
text as a departing point to inquire into
space, and a history of vision to ultimately,
This research project takes Barthe’s
the meanings of the spatial experiences produced within dance culture. More concretely, the research analyses the
implications of the visual regime created
by advanced artificial lighting techniques
in contraposition to the visual regime that
sustained a modern understanding of space. The historical focus of this investigation
will be the decades of the 1960’s and 1970’s, the moment when systems of illumination formerly invented for scientific purposes
were first used to transform the perception of space. While in modern space, light and
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architectural space, a history of the body in understand the fundamental role of the
innovative use of light for the definition of
cognitive space and the subject emerging in the second half of the twentieth century, in opposition to the modern legacy.
11
BILL HODGSON BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Can Community Self-building Contribute to Solving London’s Housing Crisis?
L
ondon is experiencing a serious
investigation has been carried out in my
of demand for properties, and prices
only two-dimensional information such
housing crisis with an excess
rising at around 10% per annum. Yet many inner London housing estates owned by
local authorities contain under-used parcels of land: air-rights above single-storey
garages, left-over corners of undefined public space, or social spaces whose
functions have long since ceased, such as first-floor playgrounds.
This PhD aims to interrogate the
potential for these small, unused sites on
public housing estates to become locations for community self-build housing projects.
The objective is to build such a project and test its viability in practice. To enable this,
new mapping techniques are needed in order to explore sites, find data, and digitally record this information in a coherent, scalable and potentially parametric manner.
My intention is therefore to develop
scaleable processes which can identify
and catalogue unused spaces on council
estates, including the analysis of significant data such as site area, potential height, and property adjacency. Thus far, this
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selected case-study area, Hoxton, using as plans, estate agents web sites, or by
wandering around streets in the hope of
finding something suitable. My proposal is
that by adding height and geometry to the mapping process, new sites can be found
which would otherwise be ignored or missed out. Furthermore, developing an interactive form of 3D-mapping will allow local
residents to discover and influence where new housing insertions might best be
placed. This software will thus contribute
both to the finding of potential sites, while also leading to community involvement, particularly regarding vital factors such as the ‘right to light’ of neighbouring
properties. An additional important feature
of the PhD, is a series of public engagement projects that will assess the willingness of Hoxton residents to participate in
community self-built housing projects.
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NAHED JAWAD BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Searching for Identity in Damascus through the Muqarnas: a Historical Architectural form in Modern Spaces
M
uqarnas or stalactites are an important feature of Islamic
architecture. They were popular
up the debate on this identity crisis in Islamic cities to other scholars.
A further aim is to contribute to the
in a large geographic area, from Iran to
evolutionary process of the traditional
development of the muqarnas in Damascus,
explore new possibilities of the muqarnas
Spain. This research maps the historical
in order to questions the reasons behind their change of use, from a period of
creativity to an era of imitation within Islamic architecture. With this historical basis, this
design-based research project looks at ways
of re-introducing this traditional architectural module into modern spaces with different
historical form of the muqarnas, and
as a surface typology. Using computational tools and algorithms, and drawing on
the mathematical characteristics of the
muqarnas, the intention is to explore these possibilities structurally, environmentally, and spatially.
An interesting question arises
shapes, vaults, and functions.
through the research regarding the limits
design, the research hopes to identify
criteria are included as design factors
Through both historical analysis and
the reasons underlying the identity crisis suffered by old Islamic cities such as
Damascus. The origins of this identity crisis lie in the clash of global architecture with Islamic architecture. The thesis hopes to
offer an alternative, and thus provide ways of incorporating the old with the new, thereby bridging the oppositional view, of Islamic
architecture as archaic, and modern global architecture as alien, in old Islamic cities. Furthermore, the research hopes to open
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of creativity when cultural and social
for the computational muqarnas vaults. Fabrication technologies and advanced
computational techniques hold the potential to advance the creation of geometric
patterns into previously unexplored areas
and with unexpected outcomes, leading to
architectural-ornamental and performative
muqarnas forms.
CARLO MENON BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
‘Little’ Architectural Magazines of the Early 21st Century: Critical Devices and Collective Practice, In and Out of Academia
T
and theory explores the role of little
represent a form of engagement with the
contemporary architecture. Almost entirely
into the safe boudoir of the printed page?
with their own studios or teaching practices,
of images, texts, and paratexts, produce
circulation create a shared space between
text-based essay?
his thesis in architectural history
magazines in exchanging ideas in
made by architects, often in combination
such non-commercial publications of small editors, contributors and readers, and
challenge the formats, modes, and values of established periodicals.
Responding to what has been described
as a crisis of criticism at the turn of the
century, this research aims to investigate the value of today’s little magazines as sites of
production to develop architecture’s critical project. It aims both at understanding little
magazines as a medium and at questioning their relationship with the discipline of
architecture as a whole through the following questions:
• Does today’s resurgence of DIY
littleness express a symptom of disbelief in
architecture’s major institutions, or a surplus of intellectual production demanding more spaces for architectural discourse?
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• To what extent do these magazines
built environment, rather than a retirement • What editorial devices, in the interplay
forms of criticism different from the typical Designed as a critical ethnography,
the thesis is intended to be a real-time
investigation of a live material. It takes a
transversal approach to the experimental tradition of architecture magazines,
combining a close reading and analysis of
several case studies within Europe from 2006 to 2018, along with theoretical speculation and practice-led research — specifically
through the self-published, experimental magazine Accattone.
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EVA SOPEOGLOU BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
The Tectonics of Comfort between Clothes and Cities
M
y research focuses on architecture
in architecture beyond socially accepted
both environmental and fabrication
spaces were buildings and urban settings
and urban design that consider
technologies. More specifically, my practice-
based PhD thesis considers thermal comfort from an architectural, aesthetic, and
socio-cultural perspective. Architectural
envelopment and comfort are here explored
as multi-dimensional qualities of inhabitable space, place, and the environment.
Following the theories of Gottfried
Semper, the research explores building as a
form of dressing. Both clothing and building are adaptable environmental modifiers
critical in the fabrication of thermal comfort. In addition, shadows emerge as temporal
architectural phenomena with textile-like
qualities, and the external envelope becomes a soft and modifiable ‘textile’ tectonic
material. Through this, semi-outdoor and
intermediate spaces emerge as the places where thermal comfort is generated.
The writings and built projects of
Bernard Rudofsky, avant-garde architect
and advocate of vernacular architecture,
help to further Semper’s concept of a textile
tectonic. Rudofsky promoted human comfort
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norms of the time. For Rudofsky exemplary with ambiguous external boundaries, such
as the patio house, the urban arcade and the Japanese house-garden, all of which relate
to ideas of comfort. Furthermore, Rudofsky’s own built work features shadows with soft boundaries and playful textures.
This paper focuses on the project
Weaving Shadows, a small summer house
located in Greece. The project involved the
design and fabrication of a 1:1 prototype. The design features a permeable and movable metallic envelope, a textile-like patterned
surface. As shadows move during the course of the day, the house becomes a nomadic
living environment. The project was designed and self-built using digital CAD/CAM
technologies. The tectonic arrangements
of semi-enclosed spaces suggest a possible
sustainable future for architecture, where the boundaries between exterior and interior are
negotiable, and bodies can freely inhabit both sides of the architectural fabric.
HUDA TAYOB BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Making a ‘Kind-of-Home-Place’
T
his paper explores the spatial and
on ethnographic research, the paper will
among African migrant groups in
particular market spaces, namely Som-City,
material practices of home-making
Cape Town. Literature on the home largely focuses on the physically defined space of
the nuclear family home. In contrast to this normative literature, Mary Douglas argues
that the home is an ‘embryonic community’ based on the establishment of ‘solidarity’.
For Douglas, home is a kind-of-space that
is characterized by a regularity of practices, people, and things. In a related yet different approach, bell hooks suggests that home is ’no longer just one place’, but a multiplicity of places. For bell hooks, the home-place is furthermore a site of radical potential,
regardless of material scarcities. In a related vein, Dolores Hayden suggests that identity is not only expressed in space through built forms, but also through spatial traditions which include particular ways of using
spaces such as yards, gardens, and porches. Drawing on these alternative
conceptions of the home, among others,
this paper suggests that African markets in
Cape Town act as a ‘kind of home-place’ for
the migrant communities they serve. Based
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focus on home-making practices within two an informal shopping mall, and Fatima’s stall, an individual small shop. Through
these spaces, the research proposes that
inhabitants of these markets do not only find ways of using space differently, as described by Hayden, but also ways of making space. On an urban scale the cumulative effect
has been to transform whole buildings into
embryonic communities. At a more intimate scale, the outwardly transactional spaces
of these African markets are characterised by regular familial and domestic practices, many of which would otherwise take
place behind the closed doors of nuclear family homes. These markets therefore
become the central space of solidarity for
transient and marginalised migrant groups in Cape Town, and in the process a kind of
home-place.
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FREYA WALEY-COHEN ROYAL ACADEMY OF MUSIC
Permutations
T
he presentation of a piece of
violin parts, which are housed within six
listener’s perceptions of the music.
levels of acoustic enclosure. A central space
music has a profound effect on the
Listening, whether live or digital, is a form of cultural engagement, and a shift in the
presentational situation can transform the way a listener hears the music. This paper
explores the relationship between my role as a music curator and my role as a composer, as I examine how writing for different
cultural contexts, acoustic spaces, and in
collaboration with different arts, affect my
compositional decisions. I will discuss these
ideas through the narrative of Permutations, a roaming performance artwork, currently being developed.
Permutations consists of a new piece
of music written by myself, performed
and recorded by violinist Tamsin Waley-
Cohen, and held within an architectural
setting designed by Finbarr O’Dempsey and Andrew Skulina. The music and its setting
are developed simultaneously, each acting as a muse for the other.
The composition is written for six violin
parts. The architectural intervention spatially distributes and affects the recorded solo
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individual chambers, each with adaptable
will be formed and shared by these chambers where all of the violin parts are experienced as equally balanced and combined as a complete ensemble. Listeners will be
able to explore the different textures and counterpoints that emerge from within
the music. In navigating the performance, the listener will be presented with the
opportunity to experience the solo, duet or full ensemble in counterpoint, contingent upon their movement through the space.
Furthermore, the architectural proposal for
Permutations is designed to be interactive and changeable, made from prefabricated
parts. The audience is encouraged to play the
architectural intervention like an instrument, affecting the degree of acoustic enclosure in the space and thus forming an integral part of the performance.
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HENRIETTA WILLIAMS BARTLETT SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
From Aerostation Wonder to Ultimate Destruction: Tracing the Aerial Viewpoint from Spectacle to Military Sublime
T
his paper is centred on a 3 to 5
the Thames Estuary filmed from an aerial
piece uses archival footage woven
from a rousing Nazi documentary on the
minute video piece. This short video
with new imagery to trace the development of aerial flight through three journeys
rostrum camera is intercut with imagery Luftwaffe ‘Skyfront’.
The third and final journey documents
between Britain and Germany.
the RAF Bomber Command annihilation of
Vauxhall balloon which travelled from
imagery from the RAF bombers in action,
Our journey begins with the Royal
London to Weilburg in 1836, and starts with the innocent excitement that the spectacle of this new aerial viewpoint provided. In
his published diary of this journey, Monck Mason (1836) described ballooning as
‘the most delightful and sublime of all
sublunary enjoyments’. With the advent of World War I there was a sudden need
to adapt this so-called ‘God’s Eye view’ to the development of aerial imaging. The
innocence of ballooning adventurers was quickly subsumed into a new form of military surveillance.
Our second journey brings us back from
Germany towards London. This time, we
follow the route of a Luftwaffe instructional film where maps with arrows pointing to
the Thames guide us towards our ultimate destination of London. A perfect model of
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Dresden and Hamburg. Using archival film
and weaving these with the Harris Bombing Maps, this final chapter traces the ultimate
descent into complete destruction through the omniscient viewpoint of the aerial.
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ALESSANDRO AYUSO
Body Agents: Deploying a New Figure for Design
T
his thesis puts forward the
I also created narratives from the viewpoint
non-ideal figures that exist in a
interwoven with the historical and analytical
notion of body agents: dynamic,
reciprocal state with designs. While body agents address radical new conditions in
architecture, they are informed by historical
of body agents, which were similarly
text, aiding in the formulation of the thesis’s framework and argument.
My research resulted in the creation of
precedents—most essentially the proto-
body agents such as ‘P_1435’, an alternately
the Baroque work of Gian Lorenzo Bernini,
and Torso 2.0, a prosthetically enhanced
Baroque work of Michelangelo Buonarroti, and the Modernist work of the radical
artist-architect Walter Pichler. I began with the observation that, in all these artists’
practices, representations of human figures enact emotional and personal themes of their authors as well as broader cultural issues and epistemes, many of which I
found resonated with the current day. These figures mediate between the architect and
the design, but also between the inhabitant and the buildings within which they are embedded.
This historical research formed the basis
of a triadic methodology which also included design and fictional writing. I enmeshed
my own images of body agents in design
vignettes, which informed, catalysed, and ornamented my animations and models.
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wistful and exuberant 581-year old putto,
version of Pichler’s Torso. The development of these figures’ particular viewpoints
and evolving histories contaminated my
design process; their expressive anatomies, comprised of reified digital meshworks,
spatially and materially intertwined with
their architectural contexts. My intention
is to catalyse architectural imagination and expose opportunities to interject situated and embodied intersubjectivities into contemporary design.
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EMMA CHEATLE
Part-architecture: the Maison de Verre through the Large Glass
M
y thesis presents a detailed and
unconsummated sexual relations across the
Maison de Verre (1928–32) through
marital conventions of 1920s Paris. This and
original study of Pierre Chareau’s
another seminal modernist artwork, Marcel Duchamp’s Large Glass (1915–23). Aligning the two works materially, historically and conceptually, the text challenges the
accepted architectural descriptions of the Maison de Verre, makes original spatial
and social accounts of its inhabitation in
glass planes reveals his resistance to the
other analyses of the Large Glass are used as a framework to examine the Maison de
Verre as a register of the changing history
of women’s domestic and maternal choices, reclaiming the building as a piece of female social architectural history.
The process used to uncover and write
1930s Paris, and presents new architectural
the accounts in the thesis is termed ‘part-
analysis, which incorporates creative projects
theory, part-architecture fuses analytical,
readings of the Large Glass. Through a rich into history and theory research, the thesis establishes new ways of writing about architecture.
Designed for politically progressive
gynaecologist Dr Jean Dalsace and his avant-garde wife, Annie Dalsace, the
Maison de Verre combines a family home
with a gynaecology clinic into a ‘free-plan’ layout. Screened only by glass walls, the
presence of the clinic in the home suggests an untold dialogue on 1930s sexuality. I explore the Maison de Verre through
another glass construction, the Large Glass. Here, Duchamp’s complex depiction of
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architecture’. Derived from psychoanalytic descriptive and creative processes, to
produce a unique social and architectural critique. Identifying three essential
materials to the Large Glass, the thesis has
three main chapters: ‘Glass’, ‘Dust’ and ‘Air’.
Combining theoretical text, creative writing, and drawing, each traces the history and
meaning of the material and its contribution to the spaces and sexuality of the Large
Glass and the Maison de Verre. As a whole,
the thesis makes important spatial readings
whilst expanding definitions of architectural design and history.
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MOHAMAD HAFEDA
Bordering Practices: Negotiating and Narrating Political-sectarian Conflict in Contemporary Beirut
F
ollowing the shift from borders to
bordering practices within the field
of border studies, this thesis proposes
an understanding of bordering practices as specific kinds of spatial practices and
critical spatial practices which occur through
processes of negotiating and narrating. These processes are in turn situated in relation to the writings of Henri Lefebvre, Michel De Certeau, and Jane Rendell.
The thesis examines the im/materiality,
spatiality, and temporality of bordering
practices since their resurfacing in Beirut in
2005. This will be looked at through the spatial practices of a triad of residents, politicians,
The thesis is structured around four
projects. For each of the projects I first
identified conditions of strategic division as
practised by political parties through borders of surveillance, sound, displacement, and
administration. I then investigated residents’ spatial practices that exist as responses and negotiations to those strategic divisions. Through this process, the four projects
produce four new bordering practices that
transform borders from stable entities into
multiple shifting practices and representations that divide and connect through the acts of negotiation and narration.
More specifically, project 1 proposes
and militias in relation to spaces of political-
crossing the border of surveillance between
practice-led research project that works with
proposes translating the border of sound
sectarian conflict. It is a site-specific and a
residents who are located within the Mazraa
district, and who are of different political and religious affiliations, namely Sunni or Shiite. The thesis explores a series of bordering practices: those produced by conflict
mechanisms, those negotiated and narrated
through my engagements with the residents, and those negotiated and narrated through the art installations I produced in response.
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two women at their balconies. Project 2 between taxi and walking journeys.
Project 3 proposes matching the border of
displacement between twin sisters and their husbands. And lastly, project 4 proposes
hiding behind the border of administration
between an elected district’s representative, Mukhtar, and his fictional TV character.
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GUAN LEE
Cast & Camera: An Architectural Practice at Grymsdyke Farm
A
s digital processes prevail in
share tactile and spatial relationships with
practice, the inspiration drawn
this exists. This thesis studies the individual
contemporary architectural
from nature through mathematical and
abstract constructs often lacks a necessary relationship to the physical realities of
making and place. My research asks the following questions:
• How can design ideas taken from an
intimate interaction with materials and place remain relevant in architectural practice today?
• How can specific and ever-evolving
modes of craft inform design executions, and be meaningfully integrated into
contemporary architectural production? My research is practice-led and
focuses on processes of casting through
on-going and hands-on experimentation at a 1:1 scale. Set within the workshops of Grymsdyke Farm, it engages with
materials in a direct and intimate manner. Photography is employed as a practical
documentation tool but also as a physical
and theoretical counterpart to casting, with the photographs becoming design works in themselves. Casting and photography
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architecture, yet limited discourse around
properties of both practices and how they
correlate, bringing to light the ways through which they learn from each other, and
intersect and overlap with architecture. It
examines works by different practitioners, such as the inventor and photographer
Henry Fox Talbot, architects and builders
Pier Luigi Nervi and Mark West, and artist
and photographer Medardo Rosso, to show how casting and photography engage the
maker with issues of representation, time, positive and negative, fluid and solid form, trace, copy and reproducibility.
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MICHAEL WIHART
The Architecture of Soft Machines
M
y thesis thesis speculates about the
possibility of softening architecture through machines. In deviating
from traditional mechanical conceptions of
machines based on autonomous, functional and purely operational notions, the thesis
conceives of machines as corporeal media
in co-constituting relationships with human bodies. As machines become corporeal
(robots) and human bodies take on qualities
of machines (cyborgs) the thesis investigates their relations to architecture through
readings of William S. Burroughs’ proto-
cyborgian novel The Soft Machine (1961) and Georges Teyssot’s essay Hybrid Architecture:
An Environment for the Prosthetic Body
I have developed a series of experiments,
ranging from soft mechanical hybrids to
soft machines made entirely from silicone and actuated by embedded pneumatics, to speculate about architectural
environments capable of interacting
with humans. In a radical departure from
traditional mechanical conceptions based on modalities of assembly, these types of soft machines are based on integrated behavioural designs and composite
construction in order to infuse the machines with notions of flexibility, compliance,
sensitivity, passive dynamics and spatial variability.
Challenging architecture’s alliance with
(2005). The research thus argues for an
notions of permanence and monumentality,
continuum of architectural machines as
typologisation of architecture (walls,
update of architecture’s long historical well as architecture’s anthropocentric
mandate. As purely mechanical models of
architectural machines are being superseded by models that incorporate digital sensing
and embedded actuation as well as soft and compliant materiality, the promise of softer,
more sensitive and corporeal conceptions of technology shines onto architecture.
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my thesis formulates a critique of static
floors, columns). In proposing an embodied architecture, the thesis concludes by speculating about architecture as a
capacitated, sensitive and sensual body
informed by the reciprocal conditioning of constituent systems, materials, morphologies, and behaviours.
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BIOGRAPHIES
PRESENTERS:
Sigi Atteneder is an Austrian born urbanist, architect and researcher with a background in construction. He was a research fellow at MIT, and is currently undertaking a PhD at the Development Planning Unit where he investigates the role of urban borders within the change of cities in the ‘Levant’. Killian Doherty is an architect who has practiced in New Orleans, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Rwanda. He has a particular interest in sites of conflict, and the dissonance of modernity and development in Africa. Killian has written for the Architectural Review and VOLUME and his PhD research is supported by the Frederick BonnartBraunthal Scholarship. Pol Esteve holds an architecture degree from the Escola Tècninca Superior d’Arquitectura de Barcelona (UPC) and an MA in History and Critical Thinking from the Architectural Association in London. Pol is co-founder of the studio GOIG and currently teaches history, theory, and design at the Architectural Association. William Hodgson is an architect and educator with a specific interest in urban housing and self-building, along with the politics of urban planning. His recent architectural projects include a self-built office and house in East London. Bill was the former Chair of Hackney’s Planning Committee, and currently teaches at the Bartlett School of Architecture. Nahed Jawad is a PhD candidate at the Bartlett. She holds a BA from Damascus University, and an MA in Architecture and Urbanism from the Architectural Association. Between 2006 and
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2011, Nahed worked at Zaha Hadid Architects. She is currently a visiting lecturer at Central Saint Martins, and an editor at LOBBY magazine. Carlo Menon is an architect and researcher with degrees from La Cambre, Brussels and the Bartlett. He is co-editor of the magazine Accattone, and is involved in teaching, exhibiting and publishing projects. His PhD on today’s little architectural magazines is supported by the London Arts and Humanities Partnership. Eva Sopeoglou undertakes practice-based, multidisciplinary research across the fields of design and technology. Her work focuses on creative outlooks in architecture and urban design, with a particular emphasis on environmental concerns and digital fabrication. Eva is currently a lecturer of architecture and interior architecture at the University of Hertfordshire. Huda Tayob practiced as an architect in Cape Town, Mumbai and Tokyo prior to starting her PhD. Her doctoral research draws on postcolonial theories, the politics of invisibility, and the notion of everyday architectures in order to research African markets in Cape Town. Her research is funded by the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission. Freya Waley-Cohen is a composer and doctoral candidate at the Royal Academy of Music. She is a founding member and the artistic director of Listenpony. Freya has received numerous awards and fellowships, and currently holds an Open Space Residency at Aldeburgh Music, where she is a Britten-Pears Young Artist.
Henrietta Williams is a photographer and videographer with an interest in urban security. Her work has been widely exhibited and published and is held in the V&A permanent collection. Her PhD research considers the aerial viewpoint and is supported by the London Arts and Humanities Partnership.
Guan Lee is a lecturer at the Bartlett and the Royal College of Art. His practice, Grymsdyke Farm, is set in the Chilterns, Buckinghamshire. The farm’s motivating concept is to establish and explore the value of living/working arrangements that involve intimate engagements with materials and processes of making, both digital and analogue.
EXHIBITORS:
Michael Wihart is an architect, educator and researcher based in London. In 2015 he graduated with a PhD from the Bartlett School of Architecture, where he obtained a Master’s with Distinction in Architectural Design and used to lead Diploma Unit 24. (http://www. wihart.net/)
Alessandro Ayuso is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Westminster. Before moving to London he taught at universities including Virginia Tech and Marywood University, cofounded a practice in New York, exhibited in venues such as McCaig-Welles Gallery in Brooklyn, and studied as a Fellow at Syracuse University in Florence. Emma Cheatle is Post-doctoral Research Fellow at Newcastle University Humanities Research Institute where she is undertaking a new research project titled, ‘The dark and airless room: architecture, maternity and gynaecology, 1750–1880’. Emma practices critical-creative writing combining text, drawing and audio in order to ‘reconstruct’ the past lives of buildings as sites of social history. Mohamad Hafeda is an artist and designer. He is co-founder of Febrik, a platform for participatory art research in the Middle East and London, and co-editor of Narrating Beirut from its Borderlines (2011) and Creative Refuge (2014). Mohamad has exhibited internationally, and is currently a lecturer in architecture at Leeds Beckett University.
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CREDITS
MPhil/PhD supervisors: Alisa Andrasek, Dr Jan Birksted, Professor Peter Bishop, Dr Camillo Boano, Professor Iain Borden, Dr Victor Buchli, Professor Mario Carpo, Dr Ben Campkin, Professor Nat Chard, Dr Marjan Colletti, Professor Sir Peter Cook, Dr Marcos Cruz, DrEdward Denison, Professor Adrian Forty, Professor Murray Fraser, Professor Stephen Gage, Dr Francois Guesnet, Dr Sean Hanna, Dr Penelope Haralambidou, Professor Christine Hawley, Professor Jonathan Hill, Dr Jan Kattein, Dr Chris Leung, Dr Yeoryia Manolopoulou, Professor Timothy Mathews, Dr Caroline Newton, Professor Sebastian Ourselin, Jayne Parker, Dr Barbara Penner, Dr Sophia Psarra, Dr Peg Rawes, Professor Jane Rendell, Dr Stephanie Schwartz, Dr Tania Sengupta, Professor Bob Sheil, Mark Smout, Professor Philip Steadman, Dr Hugo Spiers, Professor Neil Spiller, Professor Michael Stewart, Professor Philip Tabor, Dr Claire Thomson. MPhil/PhD Architectural Design students: Yota Adilenidou, Bihter Almac, Luisa Silva Alpalhão, Nicola Antaki, Nerea Elorduy Amoros, Anna Andersen, Jaime Bartolome Yllera, Paul Bavister, Richard Beckett, Katy Beinart, Giulio Brugnaro, Matthew Butcher, Armando Caroca Fernandez, Niccolo Casas, Ines Dantas Ribeiro Bernardes, Bernadette Devilat, Killian Doherty, Daniyal Farhani, Judit Ferencz, Pavlos Fereos, Susan Fitzerald, Ruairi Glynn, Isabel Gutierrez Sanchez, Colin Herperger, Bill Hodgson, Sander
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Holsgens, Popi Iacovou, Christiana Ioannou, Nahed Jawad, Tae Young Kim, Dionysia Kypraiou, Hina Lad, Felipe Lanuza, Tea Lim, Thandiwe Loewenson, Samar Maqusi, Matthew Mc Donald, Matteo Melioli, Phuong-Tram Nguyen, Ollie Palmer, Christos Papastergiou, Luke Pearson, Mariana Pestana, Arthur Prior, Felix Robbins, David Roberts, Natalia Romik, Merijn Royaards, Wiltrud Simbuerger, Eva Sopeoglou, Camila Sotomayor, Ro Spankie, Theo Spyropoulos, Dimitrie Stefanescu, Theodoros Themistokleous, Quynh Vantu, Cindy Walters, Daniel Wilkinson, Henrietta Williams, Seda Zirek, Fiona Zisch. MPhil/PhD Architectural History & Theory students: Wesley Aelbrecht, Tilo Amhoff, Sabina Andron, Vasileios Aronidis, Gregorio Astengo, Pinar Aykac, Tal Bar, Ruth Bernatek, Rakan Budeiri, Chin-Wei Chang, Mollie Claypool, Sevcan Ercan, Marcela Araguez Escobar, Pol Esteve, Stylianos Giamarelos, Nadia Gobova, Irene Kelly, Jeong Hye Kim, Claudio Leoni, Kieran Mahon, Carlo Menon, Megan O’Shea, Dragan Pavlovic, Soledad Perez Martinez, Matthew Poulter, Regner Ramos, Sophie Read, Sarah Riviere, Ryan Ross, Ozayr Saloojee, Huda Tayob, Claire Tunnacliffe, Freya Wigzell. Submitted and/or completed doctorates 2015–2016: Joanne Bristol, Pablo Gil, Polly Gould, Kate Jordan, Jane Madsen, Amy Thomas, Alex Zambelli.
This catalogue has been produced in an edition of 300 to accompany PhD Research Projects 2016, the tenth annual conference and exhibition devoted to doctoral research at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, Tuesday 23 February 2016. Edited by Penelope Haralambidou and Huda Tayob. Designed by Avni Patel | www.avnipatel.com Printed in England by Aldgate Press Limited. Published by the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. 140 Hampstead Road, London NW1 2BX. Copyright Š 2016 the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the publisher. www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk PhD Research Projects 2016 is supported by the Bartlett School of Architecture and the Doctoral School Skills Development Programme, UCL.
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On the cover: Eva Sopeoglou, Summer House in Halkidiki, Greece.