PART 0 IS AN INSPIRE FUTURE GENERATIONS (IFG) AWARDS FINALIST
LUCY CARMICHAEL APPOINTED CHAIR OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
WINTER EXHIBITION – WED 11 & THU 12 DEC: CURATED OPEN HOUSE, EXHIBITION AND OPEN EVENING FOR PART 1s
NEW ROLE: RESEARCH ASSOCIATE – FUTURE SKILLS THINK TANK
JOB OPPORTUNITY: MARKETING MANAGER
ATTEND THE BRITISH EMPIRE EXHIBITION SYMPOSIUM 2024
SEE OUR GRADUATING STUDENTS’ WORK
JOB OPPORTUNITY: CRITICAL PRACTICE TUTOR
JOB OPPORTUNITY: DESIGN HISTORY TUTOR
PlanBEE: Matching young people with work in the Capital
The Dalston Pavilion
LSA Graduate Exhibition 2024
British Empire Exhibition: Call for Participation
LEAD OUR BRAND-NEW PRACTICE SUPPORT PROGRAMME
HELP DEFINE THE FUTURE OF EQUITABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENT EDUCATION
LSA and Black Females in Architecture (BFA) Announce new partnership
24/25 Admissions Open Evening – 6 March
2023 LSA GRADUATES WIN RIBA SILVER MEDAL AND COMMENDATION
STEFAN BOLLINGER APPOINTED AS CHAIR OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
STEPHEN LAWRENCE DAY FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIP
APPLICATIONS ARE OPEN FOR OUR PART 2 MARCH FOR 2024/25
Open Evening – 7 December 2023
BOOK PART 4 NOW: SHORT COURSES – MODULAR LIFELONG LEARNING – FUTURE PRACTICE
IN MEMORIAM – PETER BUCHANAN
The LSA is Moving
Become a Critical Practice Tutor at the LSA for 2023/24
Become a Design Tutor at the LSA for 2023/24
Pathways: Exhibiting Forms
City as Campus: The Furniture Practice
Summer Show 2023: FLAARE Futures Workshop
Summer Show 2023: Meet Your Future Employer
Summer Show 2023: Close to Home
WE ARE SEEKING A NEW FINANCE MANAGER
Nigel Coates: Liberating the Plan
AN INTERVIEW WITH ELLIOTT WANG, SECOND YEAR REP
PART 4 LAUNCH
IN MEMORIAM – CLIVE SALL
Our Design Charrettes – an insight into life at the LSA
BOOK NOW – OPEN EVENING WEDNESDAY 8 MARCH
An Interview with Emily Dew-Fribbance: LSA Alumna and First Year Design Tutor
Pathways: Optic Translations
Thursday Talks: Questioning How we Embed Sustainable Design in Practice
An Interview with LSA alumna Betty Owoo
Interview with Marianne Krogh – Rethinking water as a planetary and design element in the making of the Danish Pavilion at Venice Biennale
What do our students think of studying at the LSA? We spoke to Second Year student Semi Han
Hear from our Alumni – An Interview with Calven Lee
National Saturday Club Programme
LSA Alumnus Jack Banting published in FRAME
2022/23 Design Think Tank Module Launches
Mentoring can transform the architecture profession – for good
FIRST WEDNESDAY NIGHTER WITH JIM MONAHAN
By Abigail Portus, Y2
The first of the LSA Wednesday Nighters, a student-led series of evening talks, began on 22 November with a talk by Jim Monahan.
Whilst a student at the AA in the 1970s, Jim established the Covent Garden Community Association to protect Covent Garden from significant redevelopment and the ‘last gasps of modernism’. Accompanied by a vintage slide projector on which to show his vast collection of photographs, Jim told us about the activism and community projects he organised with other locals at the time. Without their combined efforts, areas of Westminster and Camden would appear very different today.
A proposal by the GLC looked to demolish significant plots of worker’s and social housing, parks and historic buildings. Achieved through listing, raising awareness amongst local communities and even squatting in particular buildings, the fight was gradually won. Community gardens were created on empty plots in Covent Garden, on which festivals and music events were held. Pockets of these projects still remain, such as the beautiful walled Phoenix Garden tucked behind St Giles-in-the-Fields church.
Flicking through glass slides projected jauntily onto a wall of our Somerset House studio, Jim spoke of the stories with fondness and enthusiasm. Excitement shined through the grainy photographs of ‘70s cars, mock Japanese gardens that sat a stone’s throw from Shaftesbury Avenue and shoulder-length haircuts peering out the derelict windows of a building that now plays host to Covent Garden’s Nike store. A very different fate awaited it.
The GLC scheme was scrapped and it is down to the energy, activism and commitment of Jim and his peers that so much of Covent Garden remains intact as we still know it today.
Many thanks to Jim Monahan!