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Poundbury Building, English Architecture, Dorchester Building, Architect, Award
Poundbury Buildings, Dorset, England
Traditional Community in Dorset, southwest England, UK
Poundbury Village
1993-
Masterplan: Leon Krier
for Prince Charles Duchy of Cornwall Estate
Poundbury Market Hall, Dorchester
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John Simpson
23 September 2008 SUPERCRIT #6
Leon Krier presents Poundbury
Superstar architects are used to giving lectures. They can present
to their ego’s content their projects and achievements with only the
politest of a Q&A to follow. Supercrit is different. Here the world’s
greatest architects present their greatest projects to a panel of
international critics, experts and the public in an intimate environment
in the style of a university design crit.
Devised by EXP, the Research Centre for Experimental Practice at the
University of Westminster, and presented with The Architecture Foundation,
Supercrit #6 turns to one of the most controversial projects of our
times. Leon Krier will present his 1980s master plan for Poundbury
in Dorset to a panel of critics and supporters including Jules Lubbock
(Professor of Art, University of Essex), Michael Wilford (Michael
Wilford architects), Sean Griffiths (FAT), James Woudhuysen (Professor
of Forecasting and Innovation, de Montfort University) and Sarah Wigglesworth
(Sarah Wigglesworth Architects). The panel will be chaired by Charles
Jencks, architectural theorist and designer. The debate will be extended
to involve the audience at large.
Krier’s commission from the Prince of Wales in 1988 to design a master
plan for Poundbury - a ‘new village’ on the outskirts of Dorchester
in Dorset - has provided enough fuel for the debate about postwar
town planning to burn several villages. Twenty years on, Poundbury’s
second phase of development is almost complete, and further expansion
is planned. It is visited by town planning delegates from around the
world and is an influential model for house builders, urban designers
and transport engineers across the UK, yet the model for what some
have called the perfect village raises vexed questions of authenticity
and historicism; the major influence of the Prince of Wales on architecture
after his famous carbuncle speech. It is still arguably in the explosive
shadow of Post Modernism, whilst pursuing the ideals of social integration
and sustainable living. The project remains one of the most contentious
of the last thirty years.
Poundbury raises vexed questions of authenticity and historicism;
the major influence of the Prince of Wales on architecture after his
famous ‘carbuncle’ speech, and still arguably in the explosive shadow
of Post Modernism, whilst pursuing the ideals of social integration
and sustainable living. The project remains one of the most contentious
of the last thirty years.
Neoclassical English
house architect : Robert Adam
Quinlan Terry Architect
Date: Friday 31 October 2008 Time: Admission from 9.30am; doors close
at 9.50am. Supercrit runs from 10am-12.30pm sharp. Venue: Room M421,
University of Westminster, 35 Marylebone Road, London NW1 5LS, opposite
Madame Tussauds. Transport: Baker Street Underground Tickets:. Supercrits
are free and open to all, but places are limited to maintain the studio
atmosphere and possibilities for audience debate, as such advanced
booking is essential. Please register online at www.architecturefoundation.org.uk
AF Members booking now open / General booking from 1 October
Past Supercrits: Supercrit #1: Cedric Price, The Potteries Thinkbelt
(05.11.03) Supercrit #2: Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown: Learning
from Las Vegas (16.06.04) Supercrit #3: Richard Rogers: The Pompidou
Centre (22.04.05) Supercrit #4: Bernard Tschumi: The Parc de la Villette
(14.11.05) Supercrit #5: Rem Koolhaas: Delirious New York (05.05.06).
Supercrits: Books in print Supercrit #1: Cedric Price, The Potteries
Thinkbelt, Samantha Hardingham and Kester Rattenbury, Routledge 2007
Supercrit #2: Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown: Learning from
Las Vegas, Kester Rattenbury and Samantha Hardingham, Routledge 2007
Books forthcoming in 2009
Supercrit #3: Richard Rogers: The Pompidou Centre
Supercrit #4: Bernard Tschumi: The Parc de la Villette
The Architecture Foundation promotes and encourages the best in contemporary
architecture and brings it to a wide public. It runs a rich programme
comprising talks, events, exhibitions, films, design initiatives and
competitions, research, policy work and films. Established in 1991
as Britain's first independent architecture centre, The Architecture
Foundation actively bridges the gap between decision-makers, design
professionals and the public. www.architecturefoundation.org.uk
Experimental Practice (EXP) at the Department of Architecture, University
of Westminster, aims to generate, promote, support and document experimental
forms of architectural practice. Run by Samantha Hardingham and Kester
Rattenbury, who concocted the Supercrit series in 2003 and wrote the
first two books in the series, published by Routledge in 2007. Other
projects include L.A.W.u.N. projects #19 and #20 with David Greene,
and the Archigram Archival Project, funded by the Arts and Humanities
Research Council. www.wmin.ac.uk/sabe/page-467
The University of Westminster is a charity and a company limited by
guarantee. Registration number: 977818 England. Registered Office:
309 Regent Street, London W1B 2UW.
Mulalley and Company provides construction services and is this year’s
sponsor of the Supercrit series.
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Leon Krier
Robert Adam - Georgian architect
from Scotland
English Architect Studios
English Houses

photograph : Scenic Photos
Dorset Architecture
Poole Bus Station Redevelopment
Penson Architects

image : PENSON / David Barbour
Poole Bus Station Redevelopment
Devon Architecture

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Additions / photos for the Poundbury Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Poundbury Buildings - page : adrian welch /
isabelle lomholt |
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