How “Little Architect” is Connecting Children With the Future of Their Cities


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Little Architect is a program at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. Created in 2013, the program is focused on teaching architecture to primary school age children, obtaining amazing results with more than 2,400 children from different backgrounds receiving architectural lessons. They are especially focused on running their program in low-income areas and state schools in London.

“Our responsibility as architects is not just to design but also to bring architecture to society and to create an awareness about urban issues and contemporary architecture within the people who inhabit it,” says Dolores Victoria Ruiz Garrido, author and director of the program. 


Courtesy of Little Architect


Courtesy of Capco Capital and Counties


Courtesy of Little Architect


Courtesy of Little Architect

What is Little Architect?

Little Architect is an education program teaching architecture and the urban environment in primary schools, both in and outside London, led by the Architectural Association School of Architecture. They teach schoolchildren aged 4 to 11 how to observe, understand and enjoy architecture, and to become active citizens in what they hope will be a more sustainable future.


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Their in-school workshops are delivered in partnership with the class teacher and have been embedded into the UK national curriculum. The team is helping children achieve their learning targets through architecture and art, while the program provides the opportunity for children to think and communicate about buildings and cities through drawings. These drawings are used as a communication tool.

“We encourage children to create new, futuristic urban environments and to pay attention to the amazing world around them,” says Ruiz Garrido. “We want to trigger a new relationship with contemporary architecture and its local surroundings, encouraging children to care for but also to be critical of the cities we all inhabit.


Courtesy of Capco Capital and Counties

Courtesy of Capco Capital and Counties

How does Little Architect work? 

The workshops last for a minimum of two hours. Architecture is an ideal tool for integrating STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Maths) into any school topic, allowing Little Architect to create strong links with History, Science, Geography and Literacy. One of their main objectives is to foster creativity. The team has developed a timeline-based methodology where they are also incorporating cartoons, movies, and books relating to children’s popular culture.

“For most of our children, in an overpopulated and expensive urban environment like London, it will be nearly impossible to afford a ‘lovely house with a garden and a garage,’ which is hardly even a reasonable sustainable model to foster. We have to change their expectations or at least give them other valuable options. It is serious stuff! If we don’t improve the way architecture is being perceived by children today, and if we don’t talk to them positively about vertical architecture, communal areas and communities, shared spaces, urban walkability, etc, we are betraying them by setting them up for a future of disappointment and unfulfilled dreams,” says Ruiz Garrido, highlighting this issue as one of the main aspects of the program.

“The way we design our cities is changing for the better. The participatory model, the community voice and a fluid dialogue between citizens and politicians is highly demanded. Today, it is more necessary than ever that we are educated from a young age in architecture and sustainable living. If we want better cities, we need committed, empowered and informed citizens acting together for our future.”


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Below are a series of case studies discussing the various ways that Little Architect’s objectives have been incorporated into the school curriculum, with descriptions provided by Little Architect.

Case Studies

Netley Primary School / 17th September 2015

United Nations Sustainable Development Goal, Number 11: “Make cities inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable”
Two Year 5 (1 Session Each)
LA Teacher: Dolores Victoria Ruiz & Sylvie Taher
School Teacher: Rosie Chapleo & Khalida Walid

Little Architect designed double-sided A3 postcards for the students to draw and send to the Mayor of London, suggesting future projects for their local area. The main idea was to empower young children to have a sense of ownership over their future city and to teach how architecture can have a positive impact on the environment and on people’s happiness. 


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Objectives

The main objective is to encourage students to engage with both the design and management of their city.

  • To teach how architecture can have a positive impact on the environment
  • To teach how architecture can contribute to the production of energy
  • To show how the existing city can be maintained and improved in a sustainable and inventive manner: extensions, rehabilitation etc. 

Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Encouraging the Young Voice

Part of the aim of this workshop was to encourage students to trust their own views about the city. As such we had a discussion in which we asked students to tell us what they did and did not like about the current city. One young boy said that he never felt that he could talk about his own views, and he felt encouraged to hear that his opinion did matter. In many instances the team asked students to explain their views, asking why they did or did not like something. This helped them to become more articulate about their views.


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Results

Once the students had finished their drawings, the team asked them each to write a description of their project and to explain to the Mayor of London why their proposal would be a useful addition to the city explaining how it relates to sustainability in general and the UN Sustainability Goal 11 in particular. The results were spectacular as students really gained an opportunity to create thoughtful and beautiful drawings. 

Christopher Hatton / 15th March 2016

Little Red Riding Hood in your Local Area
Year 2 (1 Session)
LA Teacher: Dolores Victoria Ruiz & Patrick Morris
School Teacher: Sophie Klimt

The main objective of this workshop was to engage children with their local area through their Literacy topic: Little Red Riding Hood. The team included as part of the lesson’s material, images of themselves and their classmates, as well as images of Little Red Riding Hood. The students then had to work together to create a collage. Many students based their collages and their stories around their own very personal engagement with the area.

Objectives

The main objectives of this workshop were: 

  • Know your local area
  • Foster creative thinking
  • Encourage discussion and teamwork by working in groups
  • Encourage a sense of playful by including Little Red Riding Hood in the urban brief.
  • Foster Observation 

Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Talking about Urban Evolution

The team started by showing a Key Note presentation about the local area and had it had changed from the past through to the present. In this presentation, we showed a variety of images which related to everything from urban artifacts to buildings and infrastructure. It is important for us to convey to students that the city is a constantly changing place, and as such as citizens of the city, they are able to change it for the better. 

Learning through Games

The images were ordered in such a way that the same area was shown several times, from the past through to the present. We then asked students to “spot the difference.” Students were very engaged in this game and noted numerous things which had changed, such as the way buildings are inhabited, the amount of traffic on the streets, and even the change in shops and shop signage. 


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Conclusions

The children were very excited to see that pictures of them had been printed out to be used in the collage and they used all the provided images. Many students based their collages and their stories around their own very personal engagement with the area and chose very familiar buildings to create their collage.

Betty Layward. Year 5. Active Planet

Learning about the Planets of the Solar System. December 2016
Year 5 students (2 sessions) 
LA Teachers: Dolores Victoria Ruiz, Natasha Sandmeier
School teachers: Victoria Wiley, A. Reynolds


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

The presentation was structured in eight parts in order to coincide with each of the eight planets in the solar system. In each of the sections, the team showed the relationship of the planet to the sun and the earth, and then went into the details of its environment. Given that the environments are so incredibly different, we then started to propose different types of structures, which would be suitable for each of the planets. For example, gaseous planets might need floating structures; where planets further from the sun might need a form of architecture, which can deal with the cold.

For each of these planets and their corresponding environments, the team found examples of existing architecture to inspire the students. As we went through the presentation we always tried to highlight the point that it is very important that architecture responds to its environment. The children learned about sustainable architecture at the same time they were learning about planets and climate.


Courtesy of Little Architect

Courtesy of Little Architect

Find more information about the program here.

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Call for Entries: Lamborghini Road Monument





  • Cash prizes: 20. 000 € + CONSTRUCTION
  • Subject: open architectural competition
  • Target: Designers, Architects, Students, Professionals
  • Location: Sant’Agata Bolognese (Bologna, Italy)
  • Website: http://ift.tt/IXd70i

Visionary, cutting-edge, pure: these are the values that currently characterize Automobili Lamborghini S.p.A. (“Automobili Lamborghini”). Since 1963 this company does not create cars but four-wheeled dreams, design and Engineering masterpieces that reached every continent and became legendary in the world because of their visionary and pioneering features. An international legend with an Italian heart. A legend that, starting from 2018, will be enriched by a further exciting chapter.

Made in Italy and known as the “Urus” project, the third model of the House of the Bull will soon be leading the market as the new Made in Italy luxury icon: a supersport car among the SUVs. In order to celebrate this event, along with a new enlargement of its base, Automobili Lamborghini intends to innovate the places of the legend inviting all the designers to imagine two monumental landmarks at the entrance of its historic plants.

How to reflect the character and the values of one of the most renowned and valued brand of the international scenario in an architectonic installation? How to architecturally interpret the DNA of one of the most representative brands of the automotive history?

This is the challenge of Lamborghini Road Monument, the competition of Automobili Lamborghini to build two architectonic landmarks aimed at marking the entrances of Sant’Agata Bolognese and its plant. Two landmarks to celebrate the legend and sculpt in matter the history of speed, power and innovation.

Aimed at creating an internationally known intervention, Lamborghini Road Monument will soon mark contemporary architecture significantly. Moreover, it will give the opportunity to value the talent of the designers working for the House of the Bull, which is one of the most prestigious and renowned brands in the world.

Jury

Prizes

  • 1° PRIZE : 12.000 € + CONSTRUCTION + 1 year subscription CASABELLA
  • 2° PRIZE: 4.000 € + 1 year subscription CASABELLA
  • 3° PRIZE: 2.000 € + 1 year subscription CASABELLA
  • 2 HONORABLE MENTIONS “GOLD” :1.000 € + 1 year subscription CASABELLA each
  • 10 HONORABLE MENTIONS: 1 year subscription CASABELLA
  • 30 FINALISTS: 1 year subscription CASABELLA

All the awarded proposals will be transmitted to architectural magazines and websites and will be hosted in international exhibitions. All the finalist proposals will be published on YAC’s website.

Calendar

  • 29/08/2016 “standard” registration – start
  • 02/10/2016 (h 11.59 p.m. GMT) “standard” registration – end
  • 03/10/2016 “late” registration – start
  • 31/10/2016 (h 11.59 p.m. GMT) registration deadline
  • 02/11/2016 (h 11.59 p.m. GMT) submission deadline
  • 07/11/2016 jury summoning
  • 21/11/2016 results announcement

Discover more on: http://ift.tt/IXd70i
Contact us at: yac@yac-ltd.com

Download the information related to this competition here.

  • Title: Call for Entries: Lamborghini Road Monument
  • Type: Competition Announcement (Ideas)
  • Organizers: YAC
  • Registration Deadline: 31/10/2016 23:59
  • Submission Deadline: 02/11/2016 23:59
  • Venue: Sant’Agata Bolognese, Bologna (Italy)
  • Price: 75€

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@signordal Beautiful Winter Day

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@signordal Day in December

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House T / Atelier Ulrike Tinnacher


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer


© Simon Oberhofer


© Simon Oberhofer


© Simon Oberhofer


© Simon Oberhofer


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

Embedded in the mellow, undulating landscape of Southern Styria sits Haus T, right on top of a hill, where it naturally blends in with the surrounding vineyards. Due to materiality and formal restraint, it forms a whole with the countryside as it stands confidently on the edge, gable facing the valley.


Site Plan

Site Plan

Elevation

Elevation

The small vintner’s house, which used to be the wine press house until early in the 20th century, served as starting point for the single-family detached home. The historical vaulted cellar is made of stone and more than 400 years old. Therefore, it is the oldest part of the house, which was remodelled in the 1960’s and had been uninhabited in the last few years. The building-owners, two winegrowers, decided to make the old vintner’s house their retirement home, as the nearby vineyard has been their professional and private centre of life for so many years now.


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

According to form and function, the new building is divided into two building structures: A rectangular cube with a pitched roof was built above the vaulted cellar – a homage to the former building, that stood in same alignment and similar cubature on the gently descending northern slope. The monolithic construction of coloured isolation concrete, the structure of the rough sawn wooden plank formwork as well as the sparse square openings provide the building with an introverted character. This is why the gallery as well as sleeping and wet areas are located inwardly as places of retreat. The brown colour tone and the haptic texture of the concrete walls convey comfort. Only well-chosen sections of the 360°-panorama are uncovered by several windows with broad wooden frames.


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

On the eastern side of the building lies an orthogonally adjoining, planar and elongated building structure, which incorporates the living room, the cooking and dining area, as well as a garage. This ceiling-high glazed part of the detached house with an overhanging flat roof made of displayed solid timber, enables the surrounding scenery to diffuse into the building. This way, there is no apparent dividing line between inside and outside, so that nature and building seamlessly merge into one another. 


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

Elevation

Elevation

© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

When entering the house through the northern entrance, one looks straight through the anteroom into the living room, that can be separated from the cooking and dining area with a piece of furniture and can furthermore be used as guestroom. A service zone with a small bathroom, lavatory and storage room divide the living quarters from the garage. All interior walls are designed as furniture walls made out of darkened ash wood and comprise wardrobe, kitchen, shelves and sliding doors. Thus, the entire living area can either be viewed as one room or it can be separated into two sections by the furniture walls.


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

Plan 2

Plan 2

© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

Via the open kitchen and the dining area one reaches the intersection of the two building structures. A split level leads to the old wine cellar and the installations room or upstairs to the gallery. The smooth transition from kitchen to living area and gallery is separated from the bedroom by the bathroom and a walk-in closet, both of which have been set up as boxes in the gable space.


© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

© Simon Oberhofer

The simple materiality of the interior is congruent with the exterior appearance of the building. Apart from fair-faced concrete and timber, individual elements like the gentle pillars and the banisters are made of black steel. The flush-mounted windows inside of the wall, the plank flooring and the staircase are crafted out of oak wood. Roof, windowsills and garage door are made of copper, that changes its brownish grey colour over time and either creates a contrast to or a homogenous scene with the surrounding landscape depending on the season.


View

View

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Buro 108 Designs a Chic Interior in Moscow, Russia

💙 The Usually Overlooked on 500px by Atharva Phadke,…

💙 The Usually Overlooked on 500px by Atharva Phadke, Pune,… http://ift.tt/1YfmvNP

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Labour conference: McDonnell says Labour will run ‘interventionist government’ – Politics live

Rolling coverage of all the developments at the Labour conference in Liverpool, including John McDonnell’s speech

8.05am BST

It’s the economy day at the Labour conference in Liverpool and the key speaker will be John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor. He has been giving interviews this morning and is about to appear on the Today programme. I will be covering that in detail.

Overnight McDonnell and Emily Thornberry, the shadow foreign secretary, have announced that a future Labour government would compensate deprived regions for any funding they will lose when the UK leaves the EU. The government has promised to make good this shortfall up to 2020, but not beyond that. Labour would continue to compensate them “into the 2020s and beyond”.

For the period 2014 to 2020, the UK was allocated €10.8 billion in structural funding for our most deprived regions and communities. The Tories have given an undertaking hedged in conditions that funding up to 2020 will be protected.

For the period after, they have said nothing. That is not good enough. Without long-term certainty over funding, our most deprived regions and communities cannot plan ahead. They cannot attract other investment. They cannot make progress.

Labour will rewrite the rules of our economy to foster a British manufacturing renaissance https://t.co/Pv1u4Bfb8W #Lab16

John McDonnell unrepentant over Esther McVey attack: “You have to be honest in politics – you have to express how you feel.” @GMB

McDonnell says ‘people that ask me to apologise, go and meet the families affected by cuts. I have a justifiable anger’ , re Esther McVey

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2017 Interior Design Trends Coming Your Way

4interiorcontemporary1

I used to work in the home furnishing industry, so every fall I keep an eye on the latest interior design trends that are featured at the High Point Market in North Carolina. I love the High Point blog and featured trends in Pinterest. It’s a great place to inspire me to add unique touches to refresh my home with new colors and textures. It’s also fun to see new..

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