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RIAS Inverness Convention, Architects, Images, Scotland
RIAS Convention Inverness : Information
Invention + Intervention: A RETURN TO EDEN?
The Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland
The RIAS Inverness Convention, the UK's largest architectural conference
RIAS Convention Review by Adrian Welch
Who is the Bishop of Rome?
apparently it became mysterious...I like it' Alvaro
Siza on why his church of Santa Maria ended up with two 'chimneys'
or lanterns behind the altar.

Alvaro's talk, the finale to the conference, was cogent, considered
and lyrical. He told us he would talk about just one project, a church.
He began with the site, the Client and his own childhood relationship
with the Catholic church. He then homed in on the church, circling
it again and again, moving inside, looking at elements in greater
and greater depth, even down to details of wall linings. He took us
with him, using profound thoughts, humble jokes and gentle gesticulation.
This is where I'm missing a slide
'well you can make your own words up for these'
Mark Walker on his four words to sum up his take on the world of architecture,
starting off with....Mark!

Mr Walker took us on an arduous journey, starting off slowly in the
'First Year Introduction to Architecture' lecture complete with dark
slides and badly-photocopied slides, no slides and squint slides..."you
can see the circulation" he said about what looked like Sverre
Fehn's project, a minute cross on a faded page.
We stumbled on and at last made it to the house "which is, I
guess, why I was invited here" said Mark to the audience's bemused
amusement. I was relieved to now see a project of his own, but maybe
this was a false dawn. After yet another image of the '80s-style scene
of blinds and Breuer chairs, white baby grand squashed unbecomingly
and 'I've tricked you' mirror wall there was a call from stage left
to quickly bring the rambling to a halt. Many must have winced as
the college lecture ran out of steam, with some of the world's great
architects waiting in the wings: an embarassment to him, an insult
to them.
We're next-door neighbours
'both are laughing so probably a good deal for you'
Arni Winther on one of his first slides showing Faeroese and British
politicians shaking hands over a deal.

Arni was disarmingly humble, but soon had us laughing in the aisles.
His introduction was excellent, it set the scene of his country and
how Scotland had been part of its history. He then stated that he
would show slides of his friends' buildings too, and I felt that it
would have been beneficial to see the authors of these projects. Perhaps
the RIAS format could be tweaked to allow groups to appear in the
titles, and occasionally on stage. The latter is difficult to do well,
but I felt the formula of 'single names' didn't help Liza Fior/muf
either.
Arni's architecture wasn't always scintillating, indeed in a reversal
of Libeskind, he maintained that the art gallery "contents are
more important than the frames": indeed, but maybe the frames
could work a little bit harder. His talk's main point was that we
should respect the climate for which we design, showing three windswept
slab blocks 'imposed' by the Danish government. His more historical
references, say to reasons for wide use of wood - Scandinavian traditions
imported with the Vikings - and a sudden upsurge in timber use - due
to a storm that felled half the island's trees - were equally interesting.
Many schemes described in little detail made this more a rough guide
to the Faeroes than an unravelling of one man's ouevre: this is not
in any way a complaint, I was fascinated to see and hear about our
neighbouring country. So often Scotland looks South instead of East
and North. Sebastian's proposal (maybe half in jest) that we return
the favour and give some lectures in Tórshavn (the Faeroe's
capital) was a good one - I propose that we take up this gauntlet
and I for one am keen to go. Arni gave me his details after the event
and anyone else interested should contact either the RIAS or myself.
The light bulb went off in my partner Jim Eyre's head
'One of those moments you'll never forget'
Chris Wilkinson on the Gateshead Millennium Bridge finally being manouvered
into position with possibly the world's largest floating crane still
there.

Chris's talk was honed to perfection and full of inventive and intelligent
schemes. Back in the Eighties I felt that Wilkinson was just another
Foster accolyte putting technology on the pedestal like another conference
speaker, Nick Grimshaw. The slides, shown in slick overlap sequences,
showed a more lyrical side, though one felt that engineering was still
a strong draw.
Each project from the Maidstone Bridge to Stratford Station, from
the Hulme Bridge to the Science Museum, started with invention, simple
strong concepts carried through in a remarkable fashion. The four
original ideas for the Challenge of Materials Gallery were clearly
visible in the built result: such tenacity shows skill, determination
and vision. Again, the competition-winning montage for the Gateshead
bridge was near identical to the completed work.
Chris ended of course with the Stirling
Prize winner, the Magna Centre in Rotherham. It could be argued
that this was not as imaginative as the Eden Centre, but as a series
of interventions on a low budget this scheme is very successful. It
also has given hope to an area in very real need.
Moshe
Safdie (below left), Liza Fior of muf (Pleasure Garden
of the Utilities, Stoke on Trent, middle) and Nick Grimshaw
(his Eden project, right)

Due to logistics - such as children - I sadly didn't make the first
two talks, but hear that Tom Heneghan's was witty and creative: two
of his projects below:

Heneghan:
Review by Murray Grigor, the film-maker and honorary RIAS Fellow:
With much wit and industrial strength irony Tom
Heneghan got Friday's
sesssions off to a flying start. First, showing buildings that he
had copied
- mostly ancient temples and vernacular details from rural Japan,
where he
has worked for the last twenty years on a most challeging series of
projects, Heneghan revealed how his architecture has a great sense
of place.
Few architects will have ever considered cattle as clients, but
Heneghan
showed how cows, once offered the comfort of tree like sheltering
beams with
small windows, feel so much at home that their milk yield increases
dramatically. Cows, you see are short-sighted, and Heneghan's great
barns
seem to make them imagine that they are back under branches avoiding
the heat of the sun. This, and a number of other agricultural buildings,
showed how
applied imagination can even create architecture out of such a daunting
commission as vast manure shed. Without the dung it could easily have
been
taken as a gallery of art - though who knows in these confused days
when
function follows form.
From a forest enclave of housing well deployed through trees to
a museum
which celebrates Japan's unique but tiny blue ink squirting squid
-
Heneghan's work is an inspiration to our tacky home builders and the
kitschnmongers of the heritage industry. This inspiring man will soon
head
up the architecture school in Sydney which augurs well for the Australia's
future.
RIAS Inverness Conference
Review by Isabelle Lomholt
Modern Architects
Iconic Buildings
RIAS Convention
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Scottish Buildings - Selection
Glasgow School of Art

photo : Adrian Welch
Glasgow
School of Art
Bothwell Plaza, Glasgow

Bothwell
Plaza
Scottish Architect Studios

World Architecture : e-architect
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Comments / photos for the Inverness Conference page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
RIAS Convention : page - adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
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