participation

Live Projects - Instagram - ongoing

Sam curates the @ssoa_liveprojects Instagram account, which documents the projects completed as part of each years' Live Projects Programme. The account complements the www.liveprojects.org web archive and offers a two-way channel of communication with potential clients and collaborators, scholars and prospective students.
Event, EDI, Participation, Pedagogy, Sam Brown

Community-Led Homes - Accredited Advisor - ongoing

Sam is an accredited Community-Led Housing Advisor, having earned accreditation through demonstrable project experience and training provided by Community-Led Homes and the Confederation of Co-operative Housing (CCH).
Consultancy, EDI, Participation, Sam Brown

Cairo Bike Live Project - 26th September till 4th November, 2022

The Cairo Bike Live Project took place in Cairo, Egypt as part of the University of Sheffield School of Architecture's Live Projects Programme 2022-23. It explored the ongoing initiative by the Cairo Governorate and UN-Habitat to establish a bike-sharing scheme within wider efforts to decarbonise the Downtown area of the city. 
The Live Project was set within a longer-term collaboration between the Architecture Department at the American University in Cairo and the Egyptian office of UN-Habitat, with Egyptian architecture students undertaking analysis of the bike sharing scheme as part of a course in urban design. The Live Project itself invited students from the UK to visit Cairo and collaborate with local students to develop a period of fieldwork designed to understand how the bike scheme's pilot phase is perceived by residents and citizens in order to offer insight and proposals for future phases. 
The Live Project was funded by the University of Sheffield School of Architecture and made possible by local facilitation in the field by Momen El-Husseiny, Associate Professor of Architecture and Urbanization at the American University in Cairo.
Journal Article, Film, Climate Emergency, Pedagogy, Participation, Sam Brown

Elephant - 26th February, 2023

"Architecture is at a tipping point. Over the last few years voices of the under-represented in education and practice have been increasing in volume and are agitated for change. If we don’t collectively listen, re-adjust and change our future outlook, we limit the potential relevance of the profession in today’s society and ultimately the places we create. This book will capture insight from leading voices, both academic and in practice, aiming to encourage understanding, reflection and address critical questions, providing practical steps towards meaningful change. Our universities begin as places of diversity, with visible and invisible differences. But as individuals progress in architecture, representation diminishes, particularly at senior levels of practice to a profession dominated by white heteronormative, able bodied men. Disparities between the cultures and identities of the profession as opposed to the broader population are significant and manifest themselves in important ways, both obvious and insidious. It is critical that we address this, as a profession.
Who enters the profession, and progresses on into positions of power, determines not only who writes our history, but who feels accepted in the profession, who designs our built environments and how inclusive they are." RIBA Publishing
This piece which also includes graphics produced from a performance art as been described as essential for Queer representation at the Sheffield School of Architecture.
Book, EDI, History and Representation, Participation, Danni Kerr

Urban Rooms Toolkit - January-September, 2022

The Urban Rooms Toolkit is a public resource to be used, downloaded and shared by anyone interested in situated creative community engagement in placemaking. Here you will find all you need to know about setting up an Urban Room. In this Toolkit you can read the STORIES, get the KNOWHOW and discover the METHODS that have been tried and tested by the Urban Rooms Network. 
The Toolkit consists of a website with links to download the whole Toolkit, or individual sections:■ Urban Rooms?: introducing the Urban Room as a tool for place-based community engagement - its ethos, the forms it can take and who might benefit from setting one up.■ Stories: case studies of Urban Rooms across the UK - how they were set up, their aims, challenges, activities and the impact they had on their place.■ Knowhow: how to make the case, set up, resource and operate an Urban Room - based on real experience from the Urban Rooms Network.■ Methods: the activities, techniques and tools that have been tried and tested in UrbanRooms to foster inclusive and creative engagement.
The project was funded via HEIF Knowledge Exchange funding by The University of Sheffield. The Toolkit was produced by Live Works, co-created with the Urban Rooms Network, in partnership with The Place Alliance, UR Folkestone and the Greater London Authority. The project also included the redesign of the Urban Rooms Network website.
"The Place Alliance set up the Urban Rooms Network as one of its working groups in 2015 because urban rooms can play a vital part in working with communities in helping them to appreciate and improve the quality of their places. The Toolkit will play a valuable and integral role in continuing the Place Alliance’s campaign for improving place quality nationally by encouraging the establishment of more urban rooms." - Prof. Matthew Carmona, Chair of Place Alliance, UCL Bartlett School of Planning
"We are pleased to have partnered the University of Sheffield on the UR Toolkit project which holds immense value to individuals and groups in helping them to develop civic participation in planning and architecture, and the built environment more generally." - Diane Dever, Chair of Urban Rooms Network
Website, Book, EDI, Participation, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth 
URT_Full_FINAL.pdf

International Cohousing Summit - A Gathering of Professionals - 13th-15th January 2022

"Sam Brown is an architect and coordinates the Live Projects Programme at the University of Sheffield School of Architecture. Together with young professionals participating in the programme, he will talk about their unique collaboration with OpHouse to provide pre-design services for forming groups and developing project briefs, which can otherwise present a barrier for new groups starting out. Originating as a ‘live’ element of an academic programme, the Live Projects Programme has evolved into Live Works, an off-campus project office offering ongoing services to groups as they acquire land and move into the development phase. In focusing on participatory process and continuing community engagement, the model offers a means to support the community-led housing sector in a context of uncertain and short-term government support."
                                                                                       ---------------------------------------
Conference presentation on a case study of a Live Project carried out in collaboration with a community-led housing group, OpHouse, and facilitated by a regional community land trust, YorSpace, both based in York. The presentation was delivered jointly by the University of Sheffield School of Architecture’s Live Projects Coordinator, Sam Brown, together with students from the project, Laurie Hampson, Scott McKenzie, Thomas Ruff and Elle Clemens.
The aim of the project is to renovate Morrell House, a former care home, into residential space via self-building and related community intervention. The Live Projects team’s role was to help engage the local community and potential residents with the design of the renovated building.
The conference contribution was to a session exploring alternative means of initiating or progressing a project when compared to conventional client-professional relationships in housing delivery. 
Presentation, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Sam Brown

Nubia Way: a story of black-led self building in Lewisham - July 2021-July 2022*

*Sam Brown's contribution to this project was relatively minimal, as part of the background research carried out by the main production team.
Nubia Way was built in the 1990s by Fusions Jameen, London's first black housing co-operative in Downham, Lewisham. Constructed using the principles of Walter Segal, self-builders were offered long-term discounted rents in return for building the homes. Through interviews with the original self-builders, historians, architects and economists, this new documentary from the Architecture Foundation celebrates the legacy of Nubia Way and examines self-building as an act of resistance against the housing discrimination faced by Black British Communities.
Film, EDI, History and Representation, Participation, Sam Brown

Continuity of Community Projects - 4th October, 2021

I was invited to make a presentation on "Group Dynamics" to an event focusing on "Continuity in Community Projects", drawing on my experience of coordinating the Live Projects Programme. The event was designed to facilitate knowledge exchange between participants and PGR students at the University of Sheffield School of Architecture.
Presentation, EDI, Participation, Sam Brown, Carolyn Butterworth

Glass-house Chats - Connecting students and community-led design projects - 12th November, 2021

This edition of Glass-House Chats focused on "Connecting students and community-led design projects". The event sought to explore the increasing practice within built environment degree and qualification courses to link student work with live projects led by local communities. Having some experience of helping to make these connections, and of training and mentoring both the students and the community groups involved, The Glass-House was keen to explore perceptions of other people and organisations in this space. While some of the participants had extensive experience in this space, others were simply curious about it. What emerged was a thoughtful discussion that looked at practice in use, posed questions, and created pause for reflection on approaches and methods in use, and ultimately developed some clear recommendations to those organising them.
"Thanks again for joining the Chat...and for the really interesting conversation. I am really passionate about this space of live projects and hope that we can collaborate more on this in the future." - from Sophia de Sousa, Chief Executive at The Glass-House
Event, EDI, Participation, Sam Brown
2021.11.12_Glass-House Chats takeaways_ Connecting students and community-led design projects.pdf

Keynote presentation to the CoHoHui Collective Housing Conference, Wellington, New Zealand - 22nd June, 2021

Sam Brown from the University of Sheffield School of Architecture and Cany Ash from Ash Sakula Architects were international guests and Keynote Speakers for CoHoHui 2021 - the Collective Housing Conference organised by the Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. 
The keynote presentation focused on sharing experience of working in community-led housing in the UK and developing the web-based resource "Motivating Collective Custom Build", itself a research project developed collaboratively between the University of Sheffield School of Architecture,  Ash Sakula Architects and Design For Homes, funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council.
The presentations were subsequently discussed in a recorded, reflective format with Mark Southcombe, Associate Professor at the Victoria University Wellington School of Architecture.
Presentation, Participation, Sam Brown

Harnessing the Elements: Towards Zero-carbon Neighbourhoods - March, 2021

This online publicly accessible event sought to explore the potential for online platforms as tools for community-led design. In collaboration with The Glass-House Charity, the workshop used the universal elements of earth, air, fire and water as themes for creative co-design activities to explore how we can activate both citizens and the different sectors as collaborative placemakers. Using the area around London Road in Sheffield as a starting point for discussion, we explored how local placemaking can be informed by and drive forward the zero-carbon agenda. This was an active space, where students, practitioners, policymakers and citizens worked together with The Glass-House and with Year 2 students and tutors from The University of Sheffield School of Architecture to explore and co-design creative methods of engagement around the zero-carbon agenda.
Event, Digital Learning, Climate Emergency, Participation, Placemaking, Leo Care

Community: Housing Newspaper - 2020

Community is a design project undertaken by 2nd Year undergraduate students in collaboration with South Yorkshire Housing Association (SYHA), and forms a key part of an architecture school-wide initiative. The Housing Newspaper is a compilation and reflection on the student design projects that is thematically organised into different approaches to the design of social housing.
The Newspaper format was chosen to make the work accessible to a wide range of readers and for easy distribution. The newspaper is a limited print run, but a digital version is also available online.
Booklet, EDI, Climate Emergency, Placemaking, Participation, Leo Care
Y2 Housing Newspaper DIGITAL ONLY.pdf

Castlegate Common Manifesto - November, 2021

Castlegate Common Manifesto - reduced.pdf
Live Works was commissioned by Sheffield City Council to deliver a series of workshops with local stakeholders to inform and enhance the regeneration of the Castle Site in Castlegate, building on 8 years of research, visioning and engagement by the School of Architecture in the area. This co-production process aimed to support the development of the new public realm so that it benefits as much as possible from the extraordinary potential of this unique site and its rich community context. The workshops engaged existing members of the Castlegate Partnership and other local stakeholders to ensure representation of the diversity of the area's population and grassroots activities. The workshop themes were:• Revealing the Outdoor City• Revealing Innovation• Revealing Arts and Culture• Revealing Heritage
The award of Levelling Up funding required meaningful community engagement to inform directly the project design. 13 co-produced recommendations from the workshops were presented in the 'Castlegate Common Manifesto' and these recommendations informed directly the planning application that was submitted by Sheffield City Council in February 2023. Beyond the stakeholder workshops, Live Works ran the 'Castlegate Futures Urban Room' in November 2022 that gathered public feedback on the Manifesto recommendations, further informing the Council's plans. 
EDI, Participation, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth and Emre Akbil

Woodland Community Hall at Hill Holt Wood - an in-depth case study - 7th December, 2020

Case Study 04 - Woodland Community Hall at Hill Holt Wood - Worksheet 21-22.pdf
Sam prepared an in-depth case study on the Woodland Community Hall at Hill Holt Wood, an ancient woodland located on the border of Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire in the UK. The hall is constructed of rammed earth and native UK timber used "in the round" and has been the recipient of a number of awards in recognition of the innovative means of construction and process of design. The work involved extensive original interviews with a wide range of people involved in the building's construction and use. 
The case study was used as the basis of new teaching content in the MArch in Architecture module, ARC554 - Environment & Technology 1, in support of efforts to include content on low impact construction techniques within a diversified offering to students. 
Presentation, Climate Emergency, Building Performance, Material Cultures, Pedagogy, Participation, Sam Brown

Empowering Design Practices: Live Projects Box - November, 2019- March, 2020

Empowering Design Practices is a 5 year funded research project, in collaboration with The Open University and The GlassHouse. The Live Projects Box was designed and assembled by a Live Works team and showcased at the EDP Live event. The Box marks the culmination of the wider research project and highlights the importance of the Live Projects to the overall success of the research work.
The Live Projects Box comprises a pair of interactive units, designed to travel around the country and installed in Historic places of worship. Once opened, the boxes provide an interactive guide to the Live Projects, providing inspiration and advice for groups aiming to open their building up for wider community use. The Live Project Box also enables people to consider key issues that they may need to address in their buildings, and begin to consider how these might be addressed in the future.
Event, Presentation, EDI, Participation, Leo Care

Catalogue 2020 - June, 2020

Working closely with colleagues Luis Hernan and Ralph Mackinder and a small team of laid students, Sam developed the University of Sheffield School of Architecture’s end-of-year catalogue and online exhibition content in 2020, an innovative response to the challenges imposed by the COVID pandemic and associated restrictions on public gatherings. 
This required the development of an innovative online platform to take the place of the traditional physical end-of-year exhibition, as well as the integration of documents such as the catalogue with that platform.
Responding to this challenge also offered the opportunity to develop a method for documenting and disseminating the activity of the School that was not wholly (and only) aligned with the cycle of the validated courses and as such, more inclusive of post-graduate taught and post-graduate research activity.
Exhibition, Catalogue, Digital Learning, Participation, Sam Brown

Protecting the livelihood of vulnerable residents in Klong Toey, Bangkok, Thailand - July 2020-July, 2021

AHRC GCRF urgency grant in collaboration with our alumni at Kasetsart University in Thailand. "Protecting the livelihood of vulnerable residents in Klong Toey, Bangkok, Thailand ."Value: £100k. 
Journal Article, Climate Emergency, Participation, Satwinder Samra

Cities of the future: Where will we live? | Hubbub Investigates - January, 2020

Cities of the Future: Where will we live. Interviewed by HubBub Uk along with Marcus Fairs Dezeen. 
"The interview has come out really well, thanks so much again for your time" -Sarah Divall HubBub Uk 
Film, Climate Emergency, Participation, Placemaking, Satwinder Samra

Community: Housing Newspaper - 2020

Community is a design project undertaken by 2nd Year undergraduate students in collaboration with South Yorkshire Housing Association (SYHA), and forms a key part of an architecture school-wide initiative. The Housing Newspaper is a compilation and reflection on the student design projects that is thematically organised into different approaches to the design of social housing.
The Newspaper format was chosen to make the work accessible to a wide range of readers and for easy distribution. The newspaper is a limited print run, but a digital version is also available online.
Booklet, EDI, Climate Emergency, Placemaking, Participation, Leo Care
Y2 Housing Newspaper DIGITAL ONLY.pdf

SYHA / SSoA Housing Exhibition - June, 2021-ongoing

The exhibition is designed to celebrate two years of student work developed through the School's collaboration with South Yorkshire Housing Association, showcasing design projects, dissertation material and Live Projects.
The exhibition is designed to be deployed indoors or externally to reach as wide an audience as possible.
The exhibition would expose the excellent work of over 300 students from across the School to the general public, providing an engaging forum for discussion around topical housing issues. It is intended that several students would be involved as key members of the curatorial team.
Event, Presentation, EDI, Climate Emergency, Participation, Placemaking, Material Cultures, Building Performance, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

A Part of and Apart From - March (event) + September (presentation), 2019

A Part of and Apart From - Published.pdf
A workshop delivered in March 2019 by the authors and MArch students at the ‘School Fundamental’ Festival, Bauhaus, Dessau. The event marked 100 years of the Bauhaus and 20 years of SSoA Live Projects, providing an excellent opportunity to reflect upon our live pedagogical experience within the context of the Bauhaus legacy. The workshop addressed the polarisation that can occur when discussing different types of student projects, using a matrix of four, commonly used terms: real, deliverable, speculative, abstract. Outcomes revealed how a student project can have value as both ‘a part of, and apart from’ the external world. A paper reflecting on the findings of the workshop was presented at the AAE 2019 conference at University of Westminster April 2019 and submitted to the AAE peer-reviewed journal Charette (pending).
Event, Journal Article, Presentation, EDI, History and Representation, Pedagogy, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

 SSoA Feminist Library - May, 2020-ongoing

In March 2020 SSoA staff and students organised a Feminist Teach Out to explore feminist foundations, fields and futures and celebrate 20 years of feminist activity at SSoA. Many participants at the event expressed interest in having access to the work produced in the school over the years under this banner. During the last decades, numerous students have produced design and theoretical projects addressing feminist topics and methodologies which remained invisible to the wider School community. Much of the feminist work in the School took more intangible forms such as conferences, events and discussions which remained fully or partially unrecorded. The Feminist Library at SSoA will include an archive, in which previous outputs (dissertations, publications, theses, design projects, event recordings and testimonials) will be documented and stored, and a live part in which new events, activities, and debates will be posted in real time. The Feminist Library will be launched during a special event in November and disseminated across UK and international HE institutions. This will be a key resource for students and staff and will ensure that SSoA continues to set the agenda in feminist pedagogy and research.
Website, EDI, History and Representation, Pedagogy, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth and Catherine Skelcher

Collaborative Practice: Practice Based Learning - October 2019

The publication is aimed at practitioners interested in shaping the future of architectural education alongside prospective students considering their options for completing their Part II qualification, current students of architecture interested in reflecting on their own education and future practice, educators looking at alternative methods of learning and practices engaged with developing engaged and reflective practitioners.
Funding:The book will be published by 5th Man Publishing (a publishing arm of AHMM, one of the founding CP practices). The book will be funded via sponsorship by the Collaborative Practice partners and if possible funding through the university. We currently are unclear how we might tap into university funding.
Format:The publication will be A5 and circa 48 pages.Structure + ContentForeword [Paul Monaghan or Helen Roberts]1. Introduction [SS+JS]- Changing nature of architectural education Architectural education has not changed for 25 years. Our current model has set up a polarised debate- Challenge for educators- Challenge for students
2. The Story- 2015 – Fees- School Ethos- Gap / Opportunity- What we did- Students / Practices
3. CP Voices A student voice plus a practice voice1. Money [Toby]2. Learning [?] Learning in Practice / Learning in University3. Location [?] - Where do you sit - Sharing / Digital learning4. Working methods [Yanni + Mark] - How I used to work previously / now / future - Being a reflective Practitioner5. Cultures of Practice [? + RMA] - Revealing - Work Relations - Analysing Collaboration / Hierarchical mirroring - Taking a look behind closed doors6. Experience [Louise] - Whats it really like - What kind of architect do you want to be?4. CP Revelations [SS+JS] - Teaching in Practice - Being Objective / Less Precious - Currency of Communication5. What next6. SSoA
Report, EDI, Pedagogy, History and Representation, Participation, John Sampson and Satwinder Samra

Demystifying Architectural Research: Adding Value to Your Practice - 2019

I was invited by Prof. Flora Samuel to contribute a section to her Book Demystifying Architectural Research: Adding Value to Your Practice.  The book published by RIBA Publishing provides a practical, hands on introduction to the basics of undertaking research in day-to-day architectural practice and aims to help practitioners to exploit the growing opportunities on offer. It explores how developing a research specialism can improve the quality of your projects.  My contribution focused on the value that participatory practices within the design and visioning process can bring to architectural and urban design projects.  This sat within the Visioning section of the book.
Book, Placemaking, Participation, John Sampson

Pedagogies of Inclusion - 2019

From 2017-2019 my MArch studio Arrival City collaborated with Designing Inclusion, an Erasmus Plus project focusing on the capacity of current and future urban practitioners to make a meaningful contribution to the reception of international migrants and refugees in local urban areas. The studio was included as a Case Study in Pedagogies of inclusion Vol.1 A review of spatial design education in Europe ISBN: 978-1-9160049-2-4 
Book, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, John Sampson

CBBC ' The Dengineers' - 2018-2019

The Dengineers is a CBBC TV where children build their very own dream den. Satwinder works as on screen designer  with the children to both design and build their unique creations. Two 28 min TV shows to be broadcast on CBBC and BBC2.
"I just wanted to say a big THANK YOU for all of your help, hard work and AMAZING dens on The Dengineers this year!  I have watched all of your episodes, thoroughly enjoyed them and am so happy and impressed that we have managed to raise the bar even higher, on this series!" -Annette Williams Genre Lead Factual Formats BBC 
"A massive thank you for another wonderful bunch of dens.  And also a sincere, personal thank you for being so fantastic to work with over these last few series.  I have thoroughly enjoyed working with you both, getting to know you and particularly watching you work – I’ve learned a lot" -Jennifer Morrison Series Producer 
TV Show, EDI, History and Representation, Participation, Satwinder Samra

The Dreams of Sleeping beauty - December, 2018

Our current third year is the fifth cohort of students to be working on design projects for Scarborough.  By December 2018  we will have a repository of over 500 different projects for the town. The projects are based on a variety of briefs which engage with different aspects of the rich history of town and located on many different sites that explore its unique topography.  The proposal is to take the best of this work and develop an exhibition and/or catalogue, showing how these sites could be used and new facilities that could be proposed.  The intention is to present an optimistic future for the town, developing themes of the urban design framework document ‘Kissing Sleeping Beauty’ produced by West 8 in 2003, which so far has largely remained unrealised.
In addition to student work, we could also include staff projects in the town (Markets - Group Ginger, Woodend - P Testa, W McFadden).  The aim would also be to provide a didactic commentary to the projects, with input from the Y3 team and our external examiners.
Event, Booklet, EDI, History and Representation, Participation, Building Performance, Material Cultures, Placemaking, Russel Light

How power of communities can break the Broken Windows effect with HubBub UK - June 2018

Interviewed as Architectural Expert discussing the role of design in developing communities.
"Thanks so much for the interview today – it was fantastic!" -Sarah Divall HubBub Uk 
Film, EDI, Participation, Placemaking, Satwinder Samra

Arrival City International Exhibitions - 2018-2019

During 2018 and 2019 the work of my MArch Arrival City Studio was exhibited in Mannheim and Milan in local venues in collaboration with local partners.  
2018 at Klokke, Mannheim. Exhibition of student work in collaboration with Mark Stancombe and Yanni Pitsillides and Klokke.
2019 at Mapping San Siro, Milan. The exhibition of student work in collaboration with the Politecnico di Milano.
Exhibition, Placemaking, Participation, John Sampson
Arrival City Exhibition Board.pdf

Jones, Alan and Hyde, Rob; Defining Professionalism, RIBA - 2018

Professionalism_Pelsmakers_Hoggard_v5.pdf
Defining Contemporary Professionalism.docx
As a society we are facing accumulated environmental, climatic and resourcing challenges. In response, regulations and standards have tightened in support of better design and building practices, although many would argue not sufficiently. Yet building performance evaluations have highlighted that the majority of buildings do not perform as intended. As a consequence, user’s comfort, health and well-being are jeapordised, in addition to resourcing and pollution issues not being tackled. Regrettably, the architecture profession, against a backdrop of its own declining influence, is struggling to meet these diverse challenges.
While architects are well placed to respond creatively to site, client brief and building programme, the architecture profession seems reluctant to apply the same creativity to its own role and its responses to these societal and environmental changes and challenges. Instead many architects treat environmental context as a larger obstacle than other project constraints in creating good architecture. We would suggest however that environmental context can be harnessed to create opportunities for architectural imagination and innovation in design practice and architectural aesthetics, while simultaneously repositioning the architect’s role in society. This chapter specifically sets out how project validation, alongside interdisciplinary collaboration and sharing are essential in creating sustainable architecture and remaining socially relevant.
Book Chapter, Climate Emergency, Pedagogy, Participation, Aidan Hoggard

Learning + Teaching Conference - 2018

090118samraLTconference .pdf
Presented at Learning and Teaching Conference in 2018.
Event, Presentation, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation

Experience Castlegate - September, 2018

FoTM Speigel Latest .pdf
Experience Castlegate is a research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Partners in the project are UoS academics from Archaeology, Architecture and Computer Science with creative industry and community partners, Human VR and Friends of Sheffield Castle.
Outputs from the research were showcased in the Futurecade (Millennium Galleries) for 10 days during the Festival of the Mind 2018. The exhibit was visited by 1000s of people and featured in local and regional press and TV. The project looks at Castlegate in Sheffield as a testbed to explore how immersive digital technologies can engage people in local heritage while involving them in the processes of urban regeneration.
In the Futurecade visitors experienced a 3D digital model of Sheffield’s Castle, through Augmented Reality (AR). This was the first public view of a new model of the Castle based on recent archaeological research on this hidden, yet incredibly important, piece of Sheffield’s history. The AR overlaid upon a physical model at 1:150 scale and showing the site of the Castle, and of Castle Markets, as it is now. When the model is viewed through ipads the Castle springs into view, overlaid upon the contemporary site.
Alongside the model was a film showing the digital model of the Castle, excerpts from recent archaeological archival research and future visions of the site by architecture students. This exhibit led to a lecture by Carolyn Butterworth, John Moreland and Nick Bax in the Speigeltent to 200 members of the public. Carolyn also gave a lecture to 120 members of the alumni Heritage Circle in Firth Hall on the project. 
The Experience Castlegate model and AR is due to be shown at the National Videogame Museum in Castlegate for several weeks in spring 2019

Event, Presentation, EDI, History and Representation, Participation, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth

Around the Toilet: Design Toolkit - 2018

The Design toolkit was one strand of the Around The Toilet research project, that aimed to create an online resource to help students to understand the importance of toilet design and engage them in the challenges of creating better toilets. The work incorporated gender and disability studies with architectural design and research. The work and outputs from the project were presented at the Disordinary Architecture conference at UCL in March 2018.
The project was AHRC funded.
Journal Article, Website, EDI, History and Representation, Pedagogy, Participation, Building Performance, Leo Care

Mental Health debate with RIBA + ABS - October, 2018

Forum discussing mental health and well being at SSoA. Feedback made part of ongoing research for RIBA and ABS.
"Thank you so much for participating on the panel at the Sheffield event last Wednesday evening. I understand we’ve had some excellent feedback already. People found it really informative and interesting and there was good engagement from those that attended. We are pulling a student well-being forum together to address the issues addressed at last week’s event and continue to support the work the RIBA and ABS will be doing next year around student mental health." -Anne Cosentino Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Manager RIBA 
Event, Digital learning, Pedagogy, Participation, Satwinder Samra and Catherine Skelcher

L+T conference - 2018

DJary L+T conference 2018.pdf
Sheffield School of Architecture Curriculum Review:
• A programme level approach in a professional context• Programme level leadership• Introducing a flexible ‘pathways’ approach• Level One foundation year to be undertaken by all students• Opportunities for ‘earn-while-you-learn’ practice based learning• Key challenges - progression and distinctiveness
Event, Presentation, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary

Urban Education Live - 2017-2021

This paper is by Urban Education Live Sheffield (UEL:SHEF) – Carolyn Butterworth and Maša Šorn from the School of Architecture, University of Sheffield and Tatjana Schneider from the Institute for History and Theory of Architecture and the City (GTAS), Technische Universität Braunschweig in Germany. UEL:SHEF is part of a co-funded multi-disciplinary research project Urban Education Live (UEL), with partners from across Europe funded by JPI Urban Europe’s ERA-NET ‘Smart Urban Futures’. All UEL partners are engaged in developing models of collaboration between universities and communities. Although their situations are different in many ways, they are similar in the lack of effective and meaningful dialogue that occurs between communities and civic decision-makers in the production of the city. The shared aim is to develop methods of creative co-production that can open up the processes of urban production to those who are generally excluded from these conversations, building capacity in those communities to effect change. 
This paper focussed on highlighting the challenges faced by Community Place Initiatives in Sheffield (Pitsmoor Adventure Playground, Israac and Heeley Trust) and on their recent collaborations with the University of Sheffield School of Architecture, within the context of the Urban Education Live research project. Through this research we sought to explore ways, beyond these specific cases in a specific city, in which schools of architecture can be more effective in their contribution to local place-based urban capacity building and future resilience.
Journal Article, EDI, Participation, Pedagogy, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth 

HEDQF conference presentation - 2017

HEDQF conference presentation 2017.pdf
Presented at HEDQF conference in 2017.
Event, Presentation, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary

Studio Collaborative Production - 2017-2018

Studio Collaborative Production 2017-18.pdf
Studio: Collaborative Production is a design studio run as part of the MArch degree course at Sheffield School of Architecture at the University of Sheffield. The studio explores the creation of a built environment which supports the collaborative production of objects, processes and infrastructures; generating an architecturewhich utilises local resources and expertise and is responsive to local needs. The Studio ran over a 20 week period between November 2017 and May 2018, and was attended by 13 students in the 5th and 6th year of their studies, working towards their RIBA Part 2 professional qualification.
Report, Booklet, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary

Reflections on Architectural Education - 2017

aae-2017-proceedings_full-paper-Jary Hodgson Moore.pdf
This paper introduces the work of students on a joint MArch and Masters level module entitled ‘Reflections on Architectural Education’. The module explores innovative approaches to learning and teaching, whilst encouraging students to reflect on their own learning experience. Comparisons are drawn between architectural and non-architectural, UK and international contexts. The module engages students in wider debate about architectural education and ultimately in actively exploring and shaping practice in the School itself. In doing so it asks the students to consider teaching models employed within other disciplines, and the learning which takes place outside the studio.
Journal Article, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary

Mind The Gap - live pedagogy in an era of localism - September, 2017

AAE 2017 Slides Final.pptx
AAE Conference 2017 Extended Abstract CB.docx
A joint-authored presentation given at AAE 2017, Oxford Brookes University with MArch graduate and PhD candidate Tom Moore.
“We present this work as a reflection upon the evolving role of ‘live pedagogy’ as a critical and transformative practice that operates simultaneously in academia and in real urban contexts. The capacity of live pedagogy to empower citizens and build local resilience is apparent now more than ever as the socio-political context shifts towards co-production. This paper will explore the opportunities that our staff and students have ‘to make a difference’ through our engaged teaching and research – to build capacity within local communities, to develop effective design solutions, to open up support networks and access to funding and ultimately to facilitate the production of better quality environments.  
We celebrate these opportunities while exploring the ethical and pedagogical challenges that arise from them. The ambition of co-production is to close the gap between local citizens and the structures that produce our built environment. We believe our challenge is not to merely bridge that gap but to transform the nature of service provision in the process. Universities and, in particular, schools of architecture are well-placed to become ‘agents for change’, reconfiguring the gap between communities and traditional structures as a place for innovation and transformation, a place to take care, nurture and be ‘mindful’ of possible local futures.”
This is part of an ongoing ‘live evaluation’ of our live projects and live works partnerships done via interviews with clients. students and alumni focussing on four case-studies:Doncaster, Castlegate, Blackburn & Barnsley/Dearne Valley
Presentation, Journal Article, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth

The Careers Compendium - 2017

The Careers Compendium is part of a suite of educational resources, created in collaboration with Doncaster Civic Trust. The aim is to offer an accessible and easily digestible series of career information related to Architecture, Planning, Urban Design and Landscape Architecture. The compendium was created to sit alongside a study bursary scheme for Doncaster residents.
Resource for Secondary School Children, EDI, Participation, Leo Care

Online Chatrooms - 2017

The Use of Online Chatrooms for Participative Student Engagement.pdf
Presented at TUOS L+T conference and TESS conference in 2017.
Contents:
• 7 ‘elephants in the classroom’• Specific module requirements• The online chatroom• Reflections after application in one module
Presentation, Digital Learning, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Aidan Hoggard

Research-led Thesis projects - 2017

Presented at TUOS L+T Conference in 2017.
Content:
  1. Background
  2. Typical thesis module structure
  3. Research-led thesis module structure
  4. Student and supervisor feedback 
  5. Benefits and issues
  6. What next – further developments and improvements

Presentation, Climate Emergency, Pedagogy, Participation, Aidan Hoggard
Jan 10th_conf_v2.pptx.pdf

'Lets talk mental Health' part of work mental health day - October, 2017

Guest speaker at RIBA London. Other speakers included Robert Ball ABS, Emmanuel Owusu Ingelton Wood.
Event, Digital learning, Pedagogy, Participation, Satwinder Samra

Studio Collaborative Production - 2016-2017

Studio Collaborative Production 2016-17.pdf
Automation and robotisation are changing the nature of labour and production, and transforming the way people engage with local governance, education and cultural exchange. How can we ensure that the new society which emerges from this changeenriches people’s lives, is socially inclusive and is protective of the environment?
Studio: Collaborative Production is a design studio run as part of the MArch degree course at Sheffield School of Architecture at the University of Sheffield. The Studio ran over a 20 week period between November 2016 and May 2017, and was attended by 12 students in the 5th and 6th year of their studies, working towards their RIBA Part 2 professional qualification. The studio explores the creation of a built environment which supports the collaborative production of objects, processes and infrastructures; generating an architecture which utilises local resources and expertise and is responsive to local needs.
The studio is located within Sheffield’s proposed Advanced Manufacturing Innovation District (AMID) which links the University’s Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre to the city centre along the Don Valley corridor. The project began with an investigation of the AMID study area, carried out alongside a critique of the existing local authority and University-led proposals. This revealed a vision which is primarily commercially driven, and lacking in opportunities for engagement of the local community. The students were keen to explore ways in which AMID can become a more socially diverse, inclusive and vibrantpart of the city.
Report, Booklet, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary

Urban Rooms Network - April, 2017

URN Canvas for Community Engagement.pdf
The Urban Room Network was set up in April 2015 with Carolyn Butterworth as the founding Chair. The network’s aim is to share best practice in place-based creative community engagement and promote the value of Urban Rooms across the UK. Our definition of Urban Rooms:
“Every town and city should have a physical space where people can go to understand, debate and get involved in the past, present and future of where they live, work and play. The purpose of these Urban Rooms is to foster meaningful connections between people and place, using creative methods of engagement to encourage active participation in the future of our buildings, streets and neighbourhoods.”
On the 25th of April 2017, The Big Meet #7: Engaging Communities in Place-Making, organised by a team from Live Works on behalf of the URN, took place in UCL. The ‘Big Meet’ is a bi-annual conference, organised by the Place Alliance, who campaign for place quality along with organisations across the UK who are working in the field of place-based community engagement. 90 delegates including local authorities, housing associations, community groups, regeneration bodies, education and arts organisations attended April’s Big Meet. The event showcased a range of projects from the Urban Room Network including the Sheffield School of Architecture’s Live Works, Blackburn Urban Room and Bristol Architecture Centre. In the afternoon delegates took part in a workshop, using a Canvas for Community Engagement developed by Live Works, to understand the challenges and opportunities in developing their own Urban Room or place-based community engagement project. They were prompted to consider the ethical and practical aspects of the project in order to ensure that the engagement would be locally relevant, sustainable and creative.
Presentation, EDI, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth

Allotment of the Future: 2016 City of Science - 2016

Manchester was the European City of Science 2016 with the aim to bring Manchester alive with science and provide exciting activities for audiences that explore how science connects to our daily lives and to imagine the possibilities for the future. 
The Science in the City festival (22nd-29th July) ran alongside the conference and engaged the public in all aspects of science. One of the key content strands for Science in the City was food; activities, experiments, tastings, conversations unpicking the science of taste, truth & myths about food and health, and imagining the farms, factories and menus of the future.  A key element of Science Feast was an allotment of the future in St Ann’s Square.
Co-ordinated by Marketing Manchester, I led a team at URBED to design the allotment. Content partners included Squirrel Nation, the University of Manchester Plant Science department, the University of Salford School of Environment and Life Sciences, Sow the City and Real Food Wythenshawe. Salford based m3industries worked with us to turn the designs into reality.  
Event, Placemaking, Participation, John Sampson

Conference Paper 2, UCL, Enhancing Student Learning through Innovative Scholarship - 2016

3.pdf

Conference Paper 2. Reflecting on new lecture approaches with student feedback.
Presentation, Digital Learning, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Aidan Hoggard

TEL conference - 2016

2.pdf

Conference Paper 2, UCL, Enhancing Student Learning through Innovative Scholarship - 2016

3.pdf

Conference Paper 2. Reflecting on new lecture approaches with student feedback.
Presentation, Digital Learning, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Aidan Hoggard

A Certain Degree Of Uncertainty: Embracing Risk In The Thesis Project Via The ‘creative Survey’ - April, 2016

A Certain Degree of Uncertainty - AAE 2016.pdf
A paper presented at the AAE Conference at UCL in 2016.
“Over the past 10 years I have developed a pedagogical tool in my design studio, the creative survey. In this paper I suggest that this method can help students cope with, and indeed, welcome uncertainty into the design process and I reflect upon the problems, opportunities and consequences associated with this. Referring to interviews with past and present MArch students from my studio I will describe how this way of working has affected their attitude towards uncertainty within their education and within their ongoing careers in practice.I will describe how, in its development, the creative survey has expanded from a single exercise at the beginning of the design process to become the crystallisation of a broader critical methodology for the production of a thesis project that we believe has wider implications on architectural practice. 
In the writing of this paper I have found the work of Helga Nowotny around uncertainty in science and social science, culminating in her book The Cunning of Uncertainty (Nowotny 2016), to be very useful and much of this paper’s enquiry is developed through the lens of her theories on the subject.”
In Sept 2016 I presented the paper to colleagues in MArch to help frame a discussion on how we might encourage more risk-taking and experimentation in thesis projects.
Journal Article, EDI, Pedagogy, Placemaking, Participation, History and Representation, Carolyn Butterworth

Little City of Makers - September, 2016


‘Little City of Makers’ was a project by Live Works in partnership with Arbourthorne Community Primary School for the Festival of the Mind. Staff, students and graduates from the University of Sheffield School of Architecture helped 60 ten year olds from Arbourthorne Community Primary School to construct a model of the future Sheffield that they would like to see. We worked with the children at their school and at Live Works using a variety of materials to make the buildings, structures, green spaces and transport systems of their future city. The children suggested the themes of Play City, Working City, Animal City, Night City, Nature City and Moving City. As they build their city they have were encouraged to ask: How will the city be made in the future? What will it be made of? Who will make it? Through the Festival of the Mind the city has been exhibited to the public as it grows. The project aimed to provide a valuable experience to the children, giving them the opportunity to learn new skills and introducing possibilities for their future interests and livelihoods. If our cities of the future are to be vibrant, inclusive and sustainable places to live and work we need to include children in their design. This is a chance to develop imaginative ideas for the challenges of the future including climate change, scarcity of resources and changing demographics. Along the way we also hope to inspire the children to become the architects, planners, engineers, policy-makers and engaged citizens of the future.
Event, EDI, Participation, Pedagogy, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

Everyone teaches, everyone learns: The mutual benefits of live pedagogy - 2016

Everyone teaches L&T Workshop Slides.pdf
The School of Architecture has a national & international reputation for live projects. For 16 years our students have collaborated with external partners in the professional MArch curriculum through Live Projects. Recently we have enhanced and expanded our learning and employment opportunities for our students through Live Works, SSoA’s new Urban Room, in Sheffield city centre. Live Works combines graduate employment on projects for external clients with opportunities for students and staff to engage the public in their learning and research. We will showcase two L&T projects that have developed via the combination of the Live Projects and Live Works initiatives. The projects demonstrate a hybrid model of learning where graduates, external clients, students and staff construct projects together. Clients and students engaged in these projects will reflect upon the mutual learning resulting from their involvement. Attendees will be helped to map and develop similar opportunities within their own curricula via a matrix developed for the session.
Presentation, EDI, Pedagogy, Placemaking, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

2Up 2 Down - 2015-2020

Commissioned by Liverpool Biennial and International artist Jeanne Van Heesvijk to co-design and develop a community bakery and retrofit local housing with local young people. The project has been widely published and featured in the Observer and The Guardian. Within my role at URBED I was involved in the design and implementation of both the participartory design process and the bakery fit out. More recently I inputted into an exhibition of the work in at the BAK Gallery in Utrecht running from the 14/09/2019 through to 12/01/2020. I used the experience from the project to create a lecture which I have given regularly as part of the Participation in Architecture and Urban Design Module
Press Article, Built Project, Event, EDI, Placemaking, Participation, John Sampson

Collaborative Production; working with marginalised communities - 2015-2016

This presentation explores the work carried out by students from the School of Architecture in Goldthorpe, a former mining village in South Yorkshire, exploring the value of:
• Sustained community engagement• A range of project types and activities• Working across disciplinary boundaries• Working collaboratively to address local needs• Engagement through participation• Research by design
Presentation, EDI, History and Representation, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary
DJary L+T conf slides 2017.pdf

Studio Collaborative Production - 2015-2016

Studio: Collaborative Production is a design studio run as part of the MArch degree course at Sheffield School of Architecture at the University of Sheffield. The Studio ran over a 20 week period between November 2015 and May 2016, and was attended by 11 students in the 5th and 6th year of their studies, working towards their RIBA Part 2 professional qualification. 
The educational nature of the Studio requires the students to produce projects of a scale and complexity that goes beyond what is likely to be immediately realisable in the current economic and political context. As a result the proposals are deliberately provocative and aspirational. The ideas and imagination shown hopefully offer a vision of the future which can inspire and empower the next generation.
The starting point for the Studio is a realisation that the prevailing economic model of speculation and market-driven change is broken, and that there is a need for greater recognition of interdependency, social capital and local value. Goldthorpe – a former mining town in South Yorkshire – has been identified as a place marginalised by current economic and social policy, and a rich context in which to explore an alternative approach.
The work of the students explores a future where a sharing economy becomes mainstream, promoting non-market production and social enterprise. Students have been encouraged to develop an architecture which supports the collaborative production of objects, processes and infrastructures; an architecture which utilises local resources and expertise and is responsive to local needs.
Report, Booklet, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Dan Jary
Studio Collaborative Production 2015-16.pdf

The Value of Civic Engagement in Learning and Teaching - 2015

TESS Senate Award Conversations Presentation
The presentation focused on a collaboration with Doncaster Primary Schools and Doncaster Civic Trust. Looking at the mutual benefits of delivering a design competition for schools that is supported by Architecture and Urban Design students. The students design and deliver a workshop in Primary Schools to help children develop and create their design submission. The presentation also focused on the importance of the ‘virtuous learning circle’ that the project establishes.
Presentation, EDI, History and Representation, Pedagogy, Participation, Leo Care

School Building: Key Issues for Contemporary Design - 2015

For some time now, school buildings have represented an important field in architecture, and there is an enduring interest in the challenges this design task presents. This publication explains in eleven chapters the central parameters for this architectural typology: The role of the school in the community or neighbourhood, questions of sustainability, flexible spaces for learning, the role of furniture, participation in the design process, learning outside the classroom, landscape design, opportunities and challenges of special schools, and the role of new pedagogical concepts. Each theme is thoroughly investigated and illustrated with numerous buildings presenting model solutions for specific problems or aspects.
Journal Article, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Building Performance, Leo Care and Howard Evans

You Are Here - December 2015

LW Project Summary You Are Here.pdf
FINAL You Are Here exhibition boards.pdf
‘You Are Here’ was delivered in three parts:• the commission of 3 site specific temporary artworks for Sheffield city centre by international artists Sans façon, Leo Fitzmaurice and The Office for Subversive Architecture• a symposium ‘We Are Here’ about art & architecture interdisciplinary practice• an exhibition at Live Works and a publication presenting the outcomes
Aims: To showcase the benefits of artists and architects working collaboratively on sitespecific socially-engaged projects, sited in the local context of Sheffield, but then drawing out lessons for practice on a national level. ‘You Are Here’ was funded by ACE and delivered in collaboration between curator Jane Anderson, Live Works and SSoA students.
Report, EDI, material cultures, participation, placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth

Architecture and Resilience - September, 2015

Provocateurs or Consultants.pdf
This paper presents co-production as the means by which dialogue can be fostered and control devolved to communities, by exploring how partnerships between SSoA, SCC and local partners have been formed through recent activities in Castlegate. Opportunities and tensions inherent in this relationship are often manifested through questions about the role a university can and should play in building community resilience. Drawing on interviews with students, academics and local partners in Sheffield, the differing priorities, timescales and expectations inherent in this partnership are examined, and suggestions made, so that it might serve as a model for future co-production in urban regeneration. In doing so, the aim is to explore how work produced in academia can maintain its critical pedagogical position while still fulfilling a useful role in facilitating co-production in local communities with, and even on behalf of, local authorities.
The paper has now been published as an interview in the book ‘Architecture and Resilience’.
Journal Article, EDI, Placemaking, Participation, Pedagogy, Carolyn Butterworth

Castlegate Festival - June 2015

LW Project Summary Castlegate Festival.pdf
Live Works designed and delivered the following for the Festival:• publicity material and map• exhibition in Castle House of student design and research work for sites in Castlegate• engagement activities in Castle House using the ReMake Castlegate (Festival of the Mind) model
Aims:To make a creative contribution to the inaugural Castlegate Festival, 21-22 June 2015. The aims of the Festival were to:• provide family friendly, inclusive activities• increase footfall and engage with the people of Sheffield• promote the area and improve people’s perception of Castlegate• tell the stories of Castlegate’s history and future plans through imaginative art installations, exhibitions and activities
Report, Event, EDI, Participation, Placemaking, History and Representation, Carolyn Butterworth

Imagine Castlegate - September, 2015

LW Project Summary Imagine Castlegate.pdf
Imagine Castlegate.pdf
I edited a 112p book, 750 copies printed, exploring how a mix of vibrancy events and real projects are transforming Castlegate including:• work from SSoA and Dept. of Landscape• ReMake Castlegate• community groups FOTH and FOSC• Castlegate Festival & Sheffield BazaarSept. 15 the book was launched to 100 delegates at the international conference ‘Architecture and Resilience at the Human Scale’ & distributed across TUoS, stakeholders, national and international networks.
Aims: To produce a book that showcased the work done over 12 months by The University of Sheffield in Castlegate, an area of Sheffield city centre in decline. The intention was to demonstrate the value of the teaching and research that had taken place in the area, in collaboration with local organisations and community groups.
Report, Book, EDI, Participation, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth

All together now: how to build a social campus - December, 2015

All together now_ how to build a social campus _ Higher Education Network _ The Guardian.pdf
University campuses are intended as social spaces, yet their design often sends out the opposite message. Designers go for unusual shapes in an attempt to portray youth and vibrancy, but these can result in oddly proportioned spaces that are difficult to use. Bright colours, liberally splashed about to make areas seem lively, can feel jarring, and soon date.
Outdoor spaces can be just as problematic: think of all those walkways and squares across which students and staff march on their way somewhere else. Many are devoid of communal activity, overshadowed by buildings and lacking greenery. When budgets are tight, this is an area that often suffers.
For a social space to function well, the inside and the outside need to be considered together during the design and subsequent use. So how can we create truly social campuses?
Journal Article, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Building Performance, Satwinder Samra

TESS conference - 2015

Show_Tell_07012015_APiekut_final.pdf
Every student a voice every student active using response systems for collaborative teaching.pdf
Presented at TESS (Teaching Excellence in Social Sciences) conference in 2015.
SHOW&TEL; Teacher-Enhanced Learning for the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Sheffield.

Liveness in the School of Architecture - 2015

TESS slides LC and DJ 2015.pdf
Presented at TESS (Teaching Excellence in Social Sciences) conference in 2015.
The School of Architecture has pioneered a range of ‘Live’ learning experiences for UG and PG students. The richness and value of such approaches are recognised by staff and students alike, with Live projects firmly at the centre of the School’s identity and student offer. We see Liveness as a central approach to our future teaching, providing a supportive academic environment for students to interact with real people in the real world with real issues to address.
One of the challenges that we face in Live project work is making the assessment process an integral part of the learning experience rather than a tick box exercise. But how can we equitably, accurately and sensitively assess Live work, when processes and outputs are heavily influenced by the vagaries of a real life context, client whims and a myriad of public viewpoints?
Our presentation will be based around the following key themes, which will act as a framework around which various Live projects from UG and PG will be explored. We will aim to reflect on the successes of the projects in terms of Liveness and look at how our approach can be refined for future students, to ensure that a resilient and sustainable model is in place.
Presentation, EDI, Pedagogy, Placemaking, Material Cultures, Building Performance, Participation, Dan Jary and Leo Care

Healthy Design Creative Safety Agenda - 25th March, 2014

Healthy Design Creative Safety Agenda 25 March 2014.pdf

Motivating Collective Custom Build - 2013-2014

Sam was seconded to Ash Sakula Architects as part of a project that tested methods by which academic institutions could collaborate with industry partners. The project focused on in-depth research into the delivery of custom build housing in the UK. Sam collaborated with Ash Sakula Architects and housing industry social enterprise, Design For Homes, on the production of a short film and website that collected, curated and introduced information about collective forms of self-provided housing and argued the case for greater support for this type of development. The project attracted significant media interest and was launched in the UK Parliament in 2014. The project was set within the Home Improvements research project funded by the Arts & Humanities Research (AHRC) and led by Prof. Flora Samuel. Motivating Collective Custom Build was led by Prof. Fionn Stevenson as Primary Investigator and Dr Cristina Cerulli as Co-Investigator.
Event, Film, Website, Participation, Sam Brown
CollectiveCustomBuild_inWeb (trimmed).wmv
Ash, C., Birkbeck, D., Brown, S., Cerulli, C. and Stevenson, F. (2013) - Motivating Collective Custom Build_full report.pdf

ReMake Castlegate - September, 2014

ReMake Castlegate Culture Consortium.pptx
ReMake Castlegate was a project developed in partnership with Yorkshire Artspace and commissioned artists Simon le Ruez, Anne-Marie Atkinson and Clare McCormak to explore the past, present and future of the Castlegate area of Sheffield. As part of Festival of the Mind 2014 local people were invited to work with a large physical model of Castlegate, to express, record and share memories, opinions and ideas for the area. The project was hosted at Exchange Place Studios, where, over the course of the Festival, we invited local people and businesses to add to and remake parts of a large physical model, capturing what has been lost, what remains, and what could be.  Over the week we had 800 visitors and saw Castlegate re-made by many hands, all revealing the area’s diversity and idiosyncrasies. The findings from the project were presented at Urban Design Week and to the Culture Consortium and SCC. The project was the catalyst for years of SSoA working in Castlegate through multiple Live Projects, Live Studios and co-production with SCC and local stakeholders.
Presentation, EDI, Participation, Placemaking, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

Living & Learning - 2014

aae 2014 conference proceedings.pdf
During the AAE conference, Live Works will be based at Union Street, in the City Centre. We aim to offer an event based around a recent research project looking at the cultural value of architecture. There will be an interactive exhibition based on workshops with members of the public looking at how they value architecture. Delegates will also be offered a Spotter’s Guide, to go out and explore some key buildings in the city centre and appraise the value of them. We hope this activity will provide an interesting counter-point and fringe event to the conference; providing a city centre orientation station and showcase how SSoA engages the people of Sheffield in its work.
Presentation, EDI, Placemaking, Participation, History and Representation, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

Blackburn ReMade - 2013

Blackburn Remade Print Final.pdf
(re)create Blackburn was a Live Project by fourteen architecture students from the University of Sheffield. Between September and November of 2013 they collaborated with Blackburn and Darwen Council’s Blackburn is Open programme and the community of Blackburn. The project aimed to revitalise Blackburn town centre through the promotion of the creative industries.

Book, EDI, Placemaking, History and Representation, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth

The Cultural Value of Architecture - June, 2014

LW Project Summary Value of Architecture.pdf
AAE LW Workshop.ppt.pptx
Part of an extensive AHRC funded ‘CulturalValue’ research project, ‘The Cultural Value of Architecture’ aimed to develop new ways of evidencing value in the discipline. Live Works were commissioned by Prof. Flora Samuel to run participatory workshops to explore how people perceive different types of value in the built environment and enrich the research through these findings.
Live Works ran two rounds of workshops with schoolchildren from Dearne ALC School.• a guided tour of key spaces and buildings in Sheffield city centre, to explore the decisions affecting the design of buildings and the impact buildings have on us• Live Works visited the school to work further with the children on their own built environment The outcomes of these and workshops with Blackburn College students informed the findings of the research project.
Report, EDI, History and Representation, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth

A Live Currency: introducing The SSoA Live Projects Handbook - 2014

A Live Currency Journal Article.pdf
At Sheffield School of Architecture, with fifteen years of Live Projects, we are reflecting upon the value that Live Projects bring to our students’ learning, skills and employability. The Live Projects Handbook is central to this, demonstrating to our students the relevance of Live Projects in contemporary education and practice. This paper describes the Live Projects Handbook, highlighting its key role communicating Live Projects as both complement to and critique of the design studio. Our students gain immediate learning from Live Projects, while using them as critical tools to reflect upon architectural education and practice. The Live Projects Handbook is an important addition to the support we offer our students in this reflective and critical process. Featuring past projects and contributions from clients and students, the Live Projects Handbook makes explicit how Live Projects can problematise and expand upon the roles of the design studio, the architecture student and the architect.
Journal Article, EDI, Placemaking, Pedagogy, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth and Leo Care

Live Projects Handbook - 2013

Live Project Handbook small.pdf
The handbook demonstrates the many aspects of Live Projects, combining project case-studies, practical guides to management and assessment, reflection on learning experience and consideration of the wider impact on communities, architectural education and practice. Along the way you will encounter the many voices that collaborate in Live Projects; students, alumni, clients and teaching staff. This handbook seeks to promote a ‘live’ way of learning, practicing and thinking about architecture. Working in response to the complexity of real-life situations enables students to experience the potential of research by design and to reflect simultaneously upon the processes, roles and effects of architecture.
Book, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Carolyn Butterworth

Approaches to health and safety teaching and learning in undergraduate schools of architecture - 2013

Healthy design creative safety report 2013.pdf
Key findings of this report:
1. This research has found evidence of innovative and creative ways of teaching health and safety. It has also revealed that such good practice often addresses H&S in indirect ways and knowledge is rarely shared between institutions, resulting in variability of approach and delivery of the subject. 
2. Health and safety is an appropriate subject to cover in undergraduate schools of architecture. There is an academic imperative to the subject and it is not just something that should be dealt with in practice. Many interviewees recognised the need for the subject to be creatively addressed. 
3. ‘Health and safety’ is sometimes perceived negatively by students and staff. This is largely due to a misconception that the subject is purely concerned with applying a set of rules in practice.
4. Live Projects offer an effective context to learn about risk management and issues of health and safety. Students benefit from working with real clients and scenarios, and from an active engagement with the process of making.
Report, Journal Article, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Material Cultures, Building Performance, Dan Jary and Leo Care

What is it like at SSoA? - 2013

revh1.pdf
This project was the result of successful bids to the (no longer available) Faculty Curriculum Development Fund. ‘What is it Like at SSoA?’ is effectively a ‘transitions’ handbook intended to help support students through diverse gateways into, through and out of the School.
Booklet, EDI, Pedagogy, Participation, Ian Hicklin and Leo Care

Brentford Lock West - 2012

A new sustainable neighbourhood in Brentford for ISIS Waterside Regeneration Ltd.
Within my role at URBED I worked in collaboration with Johannes Tovatt Architects, Klas Tham, Tibbalds and Camlins to achieve an outline planning for a 500 home mixed use neighbourhood.
The design process was one of collaboration with the local community based on URBED’s ‘design for change’ technique. This started with workshops run over two evenings at the start of the process in a local café. Residents and stakeholders from the area used the first to develop a shared understanding of the area today. The second evening focused on generating a number of different options for the site through ‘collages’ and plasticine models.
The project was Awarded the Urban Design Group Practice Award 2012. The project continues to win architectural awards as it is built out.
Press Article, Built Project, EDI, Placemaking, Participation, John Sampson

Rural Urban Synthesis Society (RUSS) - 2009-ongoing

The Rural Urban Synthesis Society (RUSS) is a Community Land Trust (CLT) based in Lewisham, south-east London, with the aim of creating sustainable community-led neighbourhoods with affordable housing. Sam worked closely with the organisation to establish itself, raise funding, find a site for its first project, assemble a design team, run a co-design process, gain planning permission and start on site with its first, ambitious scheme of 36 homes at Church Grove in Ladywell, offering self-build opportunities for local people. The works are due to complete in May 2023.
Built Project, Participation, Material Cultures, Building Performance,  Placemaking, Sam Brown