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[Herald Design Forum 2021] British architect Amanda Levete fills need for public spaces

Levete and her team invented an environmentally friendly material they call transparent wood

By Park Yuna

Published : Sept. 25, 2021 - 16:01

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Amanda Levete (Courtesy of Matt Holyoak) Amanda Levete (Courtesy of Matt Holyoak)
British architect Amanda Levete, who founded the architecture studio AL_A in London, has emphasized community values as an architect, bringing public spaces into buildings and architectural spaces. In the pandemic times, she believes, such public spaces have become crucial.

“Public spaces are more important now than ever before. We need to make opportunities to connect people because when you do, relationships are formed and ideas exchanged -- and that creates progress,” Levete told The Korea Herald in a recent email interview. 

The public courtyard and new entrance to the Victoria & Albert Museum in London (Courtesy of Hufton Crow) The public courtyard and new entrance to the Victoria & Albert Museum in London (Courtesy of Hufton Crow)
The Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize-winning architect has conducted prominent architectural projects that feature public spaces. Her recent projects include transforming Oxford Street, which was once London’s flagship shopping district but has suffered as a result of the pandemic and the shift toward online shopping. She plans to discuss this project during Herald Design Forum 2021, scheduled to take place Oct. 14 in Seoul.

“Space and nature are a need not a luxury. We need to create places where we can live better together and live better with nature,” she said. “We develop designs that are conceptualised not just as buildings, but as urban propositions.”

Her projects that feature public spaces include the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, where Levete and her team created a new entrance for the public, and the Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon, Portugal, which is located on the banks of the Tagus River, inviting visitors onto a roof that overlooks the river.

After the pandemic started, Levete and her team pondered how architecture could benefit the environment and came up a new material -- transparent wood -- in collaboration with Oxford University in an effort to reconcile nature and technology. 

The Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon, Portugal (Courtesy of the EDP Foundation) The Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon, Portugal (Courtesy of the EDP Foundation)
“We are re-thinking how to use nature’s strategies in trees to grow the materials of the future. By extracting the lignin from wood, manipulating the cellulose structure and infusing bio-resins, we aim to make a new material that is stronger than steel, a better insulator than glass and that lets the light in. It is in effect, transparent wood,” she said.

Regarding the new normal in the architectural field in the aftermath of the pandemic, Levete said it was still “early to say” as the pandemic was not over yet. But Levete believes humankind should take the pandemic as an opportunity to reflect.

“What is important is that we use this moment to reflect and rethink our values and our responsibilities and how we can communicate that through the discipline of architecture,” she said. 

Levete was recognized in the Queen’s Birthday honours list in 2017 and was awarded the Jane Drew Prize in 2018. She was elected an Honorary Fellow of the American Institute of Architects the following year.

Her commissions include the renovation and expansion of the Paisley Museum just outside of Glasgow, Scotland, the reimagining of the D’Ieteren Headquarters in Brussels and the design of a prototype fusion demonstration plant for clean energy firm General Fusion.

By Park Yuna  (yunapark@heraldcorp.com)