Tag: festival

  • London Festival of Architecture – preview

    The Balfron Tower
    Brutalism: the Balfron Tower

    The London Festival of Architecture, taking place this month, is this year centred around the theme of ‘community’.

    Although a capital wide affair, several events will invite Tower Hamlets residents to consider the impact of the built environment on their lives, as well as hear about exciting ideas and initiatives for the future.

    Stock Bricks to Brutalism: Housing Design History in Poplar

    This guided walk, taking place throughout the month, focuses on the massive overhaul of housing stock in Poplar during the 20th century. Overcrowding, dilapidation, poor sanitary conditions and bomb damage in Poplar spurred some of the most emblematic and bold designs that continue to divide opinion.

    The two hour walk will aim to trace social housing from the end of World War One through to the 1980s. It will stop off at estates built between the two World Wars in the ‘economic Georgian style’ (e.g. Will Crooks Estate) before taking in some celebrated and notorious post-war estates: Lansbury, Brownfield (home to Brutalist masterpiece the Balfron Tower), and Robin Hood Gardens. The walk is led by Andrew Parnell, a qualified City of London Guide, who will be seeking to impart a little of the history of Poplar along the way.

    Shoreditch Architecture Surgery

    Shoreditch architects Finkernagel Ross, designers of “bold unassuming architecture and interiors for high-end residential, industrial and commercial clients”, are throwing open their doors on 16 June and inviting visitors to come in and have a look at their work.

    Models, renderings, and drawings will all be on display, and the practice will also be offering professional advice to anyone who needs it on all matters relating to design, planning or construction, with a 30-minute one-on-one meeting with an architect. There is no charge to attend the architecture surgery, though donations of £25 to homelessness charity Shelter are encouraged.

    Lansbury Estate credit michael owens
    Lansbury Estate. Photograph: Michael Owens

    Homes not Houses: Putting Wellbeing First

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan has declared the housing crisis “the single biggest barrier to prosperity” and has vowed to build more houses. But in last month’s East End Citizen, Nicholas Boys Smith of research institute Create Streets argued that housing is not just about numbers. High land costs and limited housing supply, he said, is a “vicious circle” that will lead to buildings that are “less popular and that people don’t want to live in”. Smith will be discussing his own radical lower-rise vision at the Legatum Institute in a panel that includes architecture critic Rowan Moore.

    For more information visit londonfestivalofarchitecture.org

  • Spitalfields Music Summer Festival 2014

    Arun Ghosh. Photograph: Naomi Goggin
    Clarinettist and composer Arun Ghosh. Photograph: Naomi Goggin

    Spitalfields Music Summer Festival once again brings superb early music, new sonic explorations, innovative music-theatre pieces, family music-making and more to East London’s most interesting spaces including Christ Church Spitalfields, Shoreditch Church and Wilton’s Music Hall.

    The programme is led by Associate Artists the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and clarinettist and composer Arun Ghosh, who respond to the architecture and history of the local area, including the world premiere of Ghosh’s Spitalfields Suite.

    Complementing them are the brightest and best in early music; a series of collaborations between music, theatre and film, and 15 world premieres.

    Spitalfields Music also celebrates 25 years of its Learning & Participation programme, one of the first of its kind, with a number of events, including the London premiere of David Lang’s Crowd Out, written for 1000 untrained voices.

    Spitalfields Music Summer Festival
    Booking information

    Phone: 020 7377 1362 On the door: 30 minutes in advance of the event start time (subject to availability)
    Tickets start from £5 with many events free
    Full details at Spitalfields Music

    Tower Hamlets residents wanting to make a first foray into the festival may be eligible for free tickets via Spitalfields Music’s ‘No Strings Attached’ ticket scheme.

    The scheme allocates tickets ‘gifted’ through donations from Spitalfields Music ticket bookers to members of the local community who might not otherwise be able to attend.

    More information via nostringsattached@spitalfieldsmusic.org.uk or on 020 7377 1362

    Young players on_Ebor Street. Photograph: James Berry
    Young players on_Ebor Street. Photograph: James Berry