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8 NEWS EVENTS


SEMINARS Ethics in architecture 28 February, London www.architecture.com/whats-on


Developing research in architectural practice 5 March, Newcastle www.architecture.com/whats-on


WALKS/TOURS Pathways to 66, Bloomsbury and Fitzrovia 25 February, London www.architecture.com/whats-on


RIBA Succession planning 14 March, Cambridge www.architecture.com/whats-on


EXHIBITION Ceramica


28 October - 10 February www.architecture.com/whats-on/ceramica


The Architecture of Drawing Prize 21 February - 14 April, London www.soane.org/whats-on/exhibitions


RIBA Presidents Medals 10 November - 24 February www.architecture.com/whats-on/presidents- medals-exhibition-2017-at-riba-north


TRADE SHOWS Surface Design Show 06-08 February, London www.surfacedesignshow.com


KBB


04-07 March, London www.kbb.co.uk


Ecobuild 06-08, London www.ecobuild.co.uk


UK Concrete Show 21-22 March, Birmingham www.concreteshow.co.uk


Materials for Architecture 25-26 April, London www.materialsforarchitecture.com


WWW.ARCHITECTSDATAFILE.CO.UK REDESIGN KLH Architects rejuvenate 1930s lido


A Grade II-listed 1930s lido is set to reopen in Ipswich after a redesign and refurbish- ment led by KLH Architects. The redesign of Broomhill Pool, which was awarded lottery funding, included vital repairs and conservation work needed to convert the buildings into usable commer- cial spaces that can have a positive impact on local economies. Constructed in 1938, the building has


been closed for 15 years and has fallen into a state of disrepair. The £3.4m Heritage Lottery Fund grant will be used towards the £6.5m restoration of the art deco building. The entrance kiosk will be restored as close as practicable to its 1938 original form, including the erection of a replica art deco clock tower to match the original. Lead architect Alan Wilkinson said that the project proposals were developed to create a “viable solution for the future of the lido.”


“The main elements of the project,”


Wilkinson continues, “comprise renovation of the Grade II listed building and construc- tion of a new build health and wellbeing


OBITUARY


Neave Brown 1929-2018


Architects have praised the work of Neave Brown, the celebrated Modernist architect, following his death aged 89. The RIBA said in a statement: “Brown


was perhaps best known for his vision- ary Alexandra Road estate built by London’s Camden Council in the 1970s. He believed every home should have its own front door opening directly on to the routes, and streets that make up a city, as well as its own private external space, open to the sky in the form of a roof garden or terrace; each of these qualities was incorporated at Alexandra Road.” RIBA president Ben Derbyshire


presented Brown with the 2018 Royal Gold Medal for Architecture, on behalf of HRH The Queen, in October 2017.


Derbyshire commented on Brown’s


passing, saying that the architecture community had “lost a giant.” He continued: “Neave was a pioneer:


he showed us how intellectual rigour, sensitive urbanism, his supreme design skill and determination could deliver well-being to the local community he served so well in Camden. His ideas, for low-rise high-density housing with private outside space for all residents, still stand as a radical antidote to much of the unthinking, not to say degrading, housing product of the era. Derbyshire concluded: “Neave’s


contribution to architecture will not be forgotten. His vision and ideals live on in the generations of architects, whom he has inspired. All his UK projects are listed. That they are loved by their communities is clear – the residents of Alexandra Road in Camden nominated him for the 2018 Royal Gold Medal for Architecture.”


Images © KLH Architects


centre which is vital for the economic survival of the lido.”


Ipswich Borough Council have commit- ted £1m towards the project costs with the remaining £2m being funded directly by Fusion Lifestyle.


ADF FEBRUARY 2018


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