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Maverick Architects – A Thing of the Past? at the Royal Academy of Arts

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Time 18:30
Date 25/02/16
Price £12

Join a range of speakers as they discuss what future there is for maverick architects – if, indeed, there is one.

With young architects now faced with the crushing weight of student debt and an increasingly risk-averse building industry, the panel explore if there is any future for mavericks in architecture.

What marks out mavericks from other architects is the way they embrace risk – whether professionally, by striking out on their own, or creatively, by refusing to conform to the norms of architectural taste or convention. Recent years, however, have seen the risks for young architects grow considerably. Seven years’ training leaves most architects beginning their careers saddled with tens of thousands of pounds worth of debt, putting pressure on even the best young creative minds to conform. At the same time, as land prices skyrocket developers are becoming more and more risk-averse and less willing to roll the dice and embrace unorthodox or original approaches.

What changes to architectural education might make it easier for mavericks? Are there sectors of the building industry more willing than others to give commissions to maverick architects? What can wannabe mavericks do themselves to improve their chances of success?

Speakers:

Alex Scott-Whitby – Founder, ScottWhitbyStudio

Harriet Harriss – Senior Tutor in Interior Design and Architecture, RCA; co-author of 'Radical Pedagogies: Architecture and the British Tradition' (2015)

Jonathan Falkingham – Founder and Creative Director, Urban Splash

Kate Goodwin – Head of Architecture, Royal Academy of Arts

Will Hunter – Founder/ Director, The London School of Architecture

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