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Winter 2016 Arriscraft Lectures: Guan Lee

March 9, 2016 Posted by Sneha Sumanth Event

Guan Lee 1

 

Guan Lee

Shelf Life: Architecture of place at Grymsdyke Farm
Thursday, March 10th, 6 p.m., MLH-1001

Dr Guan Lee is a Lecturer of Architecture at The Bartlett where he runs two studios, undergraduate Unit UG10 and post professional program in Architectural Design RC5. He is also a tutor in Architecture at the Royal College of Art, where he teaches a postgraduate studio, ADS6. His practice, Grymsdyke Farm, is set in the Chilterns in Buckinghamshire, about 35 miles northwest of London. The farm is composed of a house, a series of outbuildings, a walled vegetable garden and a small orchard. The farmhouse remains residential but the other buildings are converted into workshops and studios. 

Grymsdyke Farm’s motivating concept is to establish and explore the value of living/working arrangements that involve intimate engagement with materials and processes of making. Lee’s practice engages in a wide range of design fabrication, digital and analogue. Its aim is to expose, articulate and demonstrate the essential connections between processes of design, making and place. Guan Lee has a BSc. in Architecture from McGill University, Montreal, Canada (1997), an Architectural Association (AA) Diploma (1999) and an MSc. Landscape Urbanism (2003), also from the AA, and completed his PhD by Design (2013) at the Bartlett, UCL.

All Arriscraft lectures can be accessed here.

The full schedule for the winter 2016 Arriscraft lecture series is below:

Lecture Series Poster_final

Sneha Sumanth
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Sneha Sumanth is a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. Her role in BRIDGE involves overseeing the website and publications. Her thesis work looks at the relationship of energy and architecture in the offshore infrastructure of the Santa Barbara Channel in California.

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    Call for Submissions: Water_On Exhibition
Tags: Arriscraft LectureGrymsdyke FarmGuan Leelecture

About Sneha Sumanth

Sneha Sumanth is a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. Her role in BRIDGE involves overseeing the website and publications. Her thesis work looks at the relationship of energy and architecture in the offshore infrastructure of the Santa Barbara Channel in California.

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