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26 November 2020 HLM Architects Head of Design Philip Watson elected as RIBA Fellow
Philip Watson, Director and Head of Design at HLM Architects, has been elected as a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).
RIBA Fellow Membership is an honorary designation that recognises the achievements of Chartered Members who have made a significant contribution to architecture, the profession, and the community.
Philip Watson HLM Architects: photo courtesy of architects
Philip, who is responsible for driving design culture across HLM Architects’ five studios, leads the firm’s research and development programme which currently covers design for wellbeing, client engagement, modern methods of construction, special educational needs, and sustainability.
The RIBA panel noted that Philip led the team that designed two SEN schools in Barnsley as part of the Building Schools for the Future initiative. Notably, Springwell Academy for social, emotional and mental health issues (SEMH) was the subject of study visits by the British Council for School Environments (BCSE) and was highly commended in their 2013 Design Awards.
Philip later co-authored a paper exploring how the kinaesthetic educational approach promoted at Springwell and its physical manifestation helped deliver a step-change in student outcomes. Leeds City Council subsequently adopted the Springwell model of delivery for all its SEMH provisions and have recently completed a further three schools.
After initiating a study with Imperial College London to measure the impact of high quality, sustainable environments on people and ‘their performance’, Philip was granted funding to explore the creation of a new digital tool for engagement with building users. The resulting piece of work, ‘WellBriefing’, won the AJ100 Best Use of Technology Award in 2017 with the judges recognising that the tool attempted to ‘make the invisible, visible’.
In 2018, he was awarded ‘Visiting Professor’ at University of Leeds in recognition of his impact on students in bringing industry insight into an academic setting.
Earlier this year, Philip led the team that created the digital ‘Thoughtful Design Toolkit’ that seeks to define and deliver building occupant needs to support health and wellbeing. This was shortlisted in the BCIA Digital Initiative of the Year 2020 and in the Building Awards Digital Innovation category, also in 2020.
The panel commended Philip on his contributions to architecture, in particular the SEN school projects and their subsequent impact. They also noted his influence on the industry regarding thought leadership, practice and academia.
Commenting on the award, Philip said: “Being elected as a RIBA Fellow is not just a great honour; it’s a testament to my lifelong belief that architecture and design has the power to improve people’s lives. I look forward to continuing to champion positive change across our industry and society in my new ambassadorial role. And it’s not bad for a lad from a Council estate in Birmingham.”
24 Nov 2020 Design principles at SEN schools under the microscope in webinar
Special event to also explore challenges generated by pandemic
Tuesday, November 24 : HLM Architects and The Royal Society of Ulster Architects (RSUA) will host a webinar this week exploring the principles of designing spaces for Special Education Needs (SEN) school projects.
Organised by HLM Architects in partnership with the RSUA, the ‘SEN Schools Today’ webinar will go live on Friday 27 November and will be chaired by RSUA Chairperson, Donal MacRandal. Key presenters will include Catherine Ward and Simon Bell (HLM Architects), Holly Passmore (Psychology + Spaces), and Conor Houston (Fleming Fulton Special School).
With this year demonstrating how critical the balance is between safe, nurturing yet stimulating environments, particularly in SEN Schools, the webinar will be a timely reminder of how thoughtful design has never been more important.
Recent statistics revealed that there are more than 67,000 children with special educational needs in Northern Ireland’s schools, with the Education Authority’s support for children with SEN across mainstream and special schools reaching £311m in 2019-20.* Figures last year also highlighted that there were 140 special schools catering for particular types of disability and special needs in the Republic of Ireland.
The webinar will also include a panel discussion after the presentations to generate further discussion on this important topic.  Architects Arthur Sloan (Isherwood and Ellis) and Ciaran Mackel (ARdMackel Architects) will also take part in this expert Q&A panel discussion to dive deeper into the challenges that the current pandemic has generated in the context of designing learner spaces.
Commenting on the event, RSUA Chairperson Donal MacRandal said, “The pandemic has really brought into sharp focus the importance of providing education for our children, particularly in SEN schools, where stimulation and safety are crucial considerations.  Investment in the quality of our educational environments is one which we know society recoups many times over.
“We are proud to partner with the organisers of this webinar which brings in a wide range of sector-specific expertise from both architects and clients who have delivered buildings which help ensure that every child can reach their full potential.  I am confident the debate will help deliver even better spaces for our young people”.
Speaker Catherine Ward, an Associate Architect at HLM and the company’s SEN Lead has over twenty years’ experience in architectural practice, working predominantly on education projects throughout the UK including HE, FE, Schools and SEN. In her role at HLM, Catherine manages the development of HLM’s special education portfolio and profile nationally. Simon Bell, Director and Sustainability Sponsor at HLM, will also be joining Catherine to discuss how to approach SEN projects locally and the sustainability factors.
Commenting on the upcoming webinar, Catherine Ward (HLM Architects) said: “We are living in a time of flux, and more than ever we need to make the most out of essential spaces for learners. The focus now needs to be on what can be done with spaces to provide safety, while maintaining supportive and effective learning for young people. I look forward to debating how we can use these ideas to develop and further enhance future learning environments.”
Conor Houston is the Chairman of the Board of Governors of Fleming Fulton Special School and founder of civic initiative, Connected Citizens and works to promote active citizenship and is passionate about creating the space for citizens to co-design solutions for our society.
Holly Passmore, Researcher at Psychology + Spaces is particularly interested in exploring how Covid-19 will impact children and young people’s current and future health, well-being and opportunities.
The webinar is part of a series of online events being hosted by RSUA this autumn.
To register for the webinar please visit https://www.rsua.org.uk/events/continuous-professional-development/design-principles-at-sen-schools-under-the-microscope/
20 Nov 2020 Radisson Blu Hotel Sheffield, Heart of the City, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, UK image courtesy of architects Radisson Blu Hotel Sheffield Heart of the City Proposals to introduce sophisticated hotelier Radisson Blu to a key Sheffield city centre location have been approved by the Local Planning Authority. The project, designed by HLM Architects working with the Council’s Strategic Development Partner, Queensberry, is the latest to be approved as part of Sheffield’s transformational Heart of the City scheme.
24 Aug 2020 HLM named one of six in competition to find homes of the future
image courtesy of architects
24th of August 2020 – HLM Architects is delighted to announce that out of more than 200 entries it has been shortlisted to one of six for the second phase of the hotly contested RIBA Home of 2030 Design competition.
Announced yesterday (23 August 2020) by Housing Minister Christopher Pincher, the Home of 2030 competition has encouraged the best and brightest talents of the housing industry to design environmentally friendly homes that support people in leading independent, fulfilling lives as our society ages.
image courtesy of architects
The competition aims to attract the best and brightest talents of the housing industry to design the homes of the future. In the first phase of the competition, small businesses, designers and manufacturers were invited to come forward with ideas for new low carbon, age-friendly homes, meeting the highest standards of design whilst tackling the key challenges facing our society.
In developing its submission for the first phase of this competition, HLM Architects created the concept of a universal manufacturing platform that enables flexible, affordable, and sustainable ‘forever’ homes that are able to perpetuate a circular economy. These homes will be able to grow and shrink with their owners needs to create stable communities and a strong sense of place.
This concept was developed with support from the University of Sheffield Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) with the ambition to solve the issue of capacity and compatibility of offsite housing construction through development of a design standard that enables any offsite manufactured system to deliver the same high quality, sustainable design, with parts that are interchangeable.
In the second phase of the competition HLM Architects and AMRC will be joined by Mid Group, a contractor that will help develop a platform that provides interchangeability with a varied ecosystem of components and suppliers. Completing the team are Hydrock, who will bring engineering excellence and Greenbuild, HLM Architect’s sustainability consultant partners.
HLM Director and Head of Design, Philip Watson said, ‘Our ambition is to use the power of design and technology to create homes that are flexible, sustainable and affordable. These will be homes that adapt to people’s needs over their lifetime so that they can put down strong roots, thus nurturing supportive communities. At a macro level we are also seeking to create a design platform that enables the entire construction and manufacturing industry to unite to solve our housing crisis.’
The team will now go on to develop their design concepts and present to the Evaluation Panel. Winners will then be introduced to Homes England development framework partners to explore the possibility of developing bids for a series of homes on Homes England land.
Background Information: The Home of 2030 competition is a cross Government initiative that brings together MHCLG (the Ministry of Housing Communities and Local Government, responsible for housing supply, standards, planning and building safety), BEIS (Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, responsible for innovation and business strategy) and DHSC (Department of Health and Social Care, responsible for health, wellbeing and issues arising from an ageing population).
Each of the departments is seeking a benefit: increased housing supply through greater diversity in the market, improved quality and standards in homes through innovation and technology, and social, environmental and economic benefits arising from better health outcomes. Homes England, the Government’s housing accelerator, are engaged in the initiative and are now leading a subsequent development phase subject to successful development bids by Homes England Delivery Panel and Winner consortia.
26 Sep 2019 HLM Architects continued growth extends into the Dublin market
September 26, 2019: Leading design and architecture company, HLM Architects, has strengthened its offering to its growing portfolio of clients as it extends into the Dublin market.
The Dublin base, located at Fitzwilliam Place, facilitates HLM Architects continued growth and success. The workspace located in central Dublin will enable HLM to access wider opportunities and develop activities across Ireland.
With studios across the UK and internationally, the award-winning firm responds creatively to the unique circumstances of each project. HLM’s studio in Belfast has undertaken several projects across Ireland for over 20 years.
Children’s Health Ireland (CHI) at Connolly Hospital in Blanchardstown: photo courtesy of architects
The firm recently marked a milestone with the completion of the urgent care centre for Children’s Health Ireland (CHI) at Connolly Hospital in Blanchardstown, with work progressing on Children’s Health Ireland at Tallaght University Hospital.
HLM delivers thoughtful design, with spaces and places that improve lives central to its offering. The 180 strong team has completed projects across a range of sectors including education, healthcare, residential, hospitality and leisure, defence, workplace and culture.
HLM Architects Director Nick Beecroft: photo courtesy of architects
Commenting on the Dublin base, HLM Director Nick Beecroft, said “Through this expansion we have reinforced our commitment and offering to our ambitious clients in the Ireland market. The new HLM base ensures we are better suited than ever to create memorable places across Ireland, always understanding the needs of the people who use them.
“We are continually developing our already strong network in Dublin and are really excited to explore the opportunities across all our sectors.”
The firm has won multiple national and international awards for its expertise across many disciplines, such as Architecture, Interior Design, Landscape Architecture, Environmental and Masterplanning.
10 Sep 2019 Swanley Square Shopping Centre in Kent, Ashford, Kent, South East England, UK
A major regeneration scheme designed by HLM Architects, aimed at revitalising Swanley Square Shopping Centre in Kent, with new retail, community and residential accommodation including Private Rented Sector homes, has been given the green light.
The U+I project, which was approved following a Public Inquiry held locally, comprises 340 residential homes, 46,780 sq ft of mixed-use development including retail, restaurants, shops, new community multi-purpose space, and a new multi-storey car park.
Kent Architecture News
6 Sep 2019 Whitehorn Hall student accommodation at The University of St Andrews, Scotland Design: HLM Architects photo © David Barbour Photography Whitehorn Hall student accommodation Beating off stiff competition in the Architecture: Residential category, HLM was rewarded for the thoughtful and innovative design of Whitehorn Hall student accommodation at The University of St Andrews.
11 May 2019 Sudbourne Primary School Building, Hayter Road, Brixton, London SW2 5AP, England, UK image courtesy of HLM Architects Sudbourne Primary School Building This new education building provides an additional 360 pupil places with the creation of a split site school, expanding from 1.5FE to 3FE.
11 Dec 2018 HLM and Kier VolkerFitzpatrick Appointed to £160 million project at RAF Lakenheath
Design and architecture company HLM has been awarded the £160million project at RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk, England, by the Defence Infrastructure Organisation.
The project includes building a F-35 flight simulator, maintenance unit, new hangars and storage facilities. HLM will be working alongside engineering and construction firm, Kier VolkerFitzpatrick, to design and deliver the new facilities. All HLM studios, including Glasgow, will be working closely together to ensure the successful delivery of the project.
photo courtesy of architects
The Suffolk airbase will be the first permanent international site for US Air Force F-35s in Europe. The flight simulator will have the capacity to link to other simulators used by pilots across the UK and beyond, allowing expertise to be shared and pilots from the UK and US to work together.
Mick Scherdel, Director at HLM, said: “At HLM, we are privileged to be awarded the RAF Lakenheath project. Since the Defence Academy 2000, HLM has been improving and enhancing training, living and learning across the UK Defence Estates. RAF Lakenheath will benefit further from our recent experience on Project Wellesley, DCLPA Worthy Down and Catterick Garrison.”
Managing Director of Aviation and Defence at Kier, James Hindes, said: “It builds on our extensive expertise in the defence sector, delivering first-class projects within secure environments including facilities at MoD Lyneham and RAF Shawbury.”
For more information on HLM visit: www.hlmarchitects.coms or follow @HLMArchitects on Twitter.
6 Jul 2018 Patrick Arends Appointed as Head of Hospitality, Leisure & Culture at HLM
Patrick Arends has joined HLM, a leading design and architecture practice with studios in the UK and internationally.
Patrick Arends HLM Architects: image courtesy of architects office
Patrick has been appointed as the Head of Hospitality, Leisure and Culture at the practice, bringing over 17 years of experience of delivering high quality and high value projects internationally. As sector lead, he will add to HLM’s acclaimed experience in the hospitality, leisure and culture sectors.
As winner of the RIBA West Midlands Emerging Architect of the Year award in 2014, Patrick possesses a strong skillset of innovation, quality and detail in his design work. He will bring this insight to the practice and to each design project.
Patrick has delivered numerous national and international projects across the UK and the Netherlands. These include libraries, sports halls, hotels, art centres, theatres and Grade II listed cultural heritage buildings.
Karen Mosley, HLM Managing Director, said, “We are pleased to welcome Patrick to the growing HLM team and to extend our scope further within the hospitality, leisure and culture sectors. We are looking forward to sharing his valuable knowledge and experience with both our clients and our 150-strong team across all HLM studios.”
Patrick commented, “I am delighted to join the highly-skilled, professional design and architecture team at HLM. As Head of Hospitality, Leisure and Culture, I am thrilled to begin delivering strong creative and visionary projects with a very talented team of colleagues.”
Patrick is currently leading the Staybridge Suites Hotel project in Cardiff Bay. As the first long stay hotel in Wales, this will include 75 suites with fully equipped kitchens. Also in Cardiff Bay, Patrick and the HLM team have been appointed to create a 1000m2 extension to science centre Techniquest’s current exhibition facility. The immersive space will be dedicated to engaging audiences with innovative, contemporary science and will highlight new research and developments across Science Technology Engineering & Mathematics sectors.
HLM has ambitious growth plans for its service areas of architecture, interiors, landscape architecture and urban design. It has also recently appointed 6 new directors to its Board, including internal promotions and a new appointment. Creating the next generation of leadership within the practice, the new directors will make further positive contributions to the direction and performance at HLM.
As an international practice, it serves Ireland and the UK with studios in Belfast, London, Sheffield, Glasgow, Cardiff and Manchester. It also has studios in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
11 October 2017 HLM Glasgow Wins Prestigious People Development Award
10 Oct – HLM, a leading design and architecture company, has won the coveted People Development category at the prestigious Glasgow Business Awards 2017.
HLM‘s people development efforts are widely known, from the HLM Academy to the company’s strong values, lifestyle packages and family friendly initiatives. The HLM Academy is a professional excellence programme which helps ensure all employees have the opportunity and resources to reach their full potential.
The unique programme consists of a thorough induction, as well as modules, webinars, coaching, graduate programmes and on-the-job structured training. The academy ensures training and development is a company priority and enables its team to work to the best of their ability.
HLM recognises that people development is vital for ensuring employees are engaged, with Deloitte’s 2017 Global Human Capital Trends revealing that 84% of employees in the UK rate it important or very important . The leading design and architecture company also recently recruited and trained over five apprentices this summer in its Glasgow studio. The scheme is one of the few in the Glasgow area which gives young people the experience they need to stand out in Scotland’s increasingly competitive jobs market.
Lorraine Robertson, who heads up HLM Scotland said: “We are very proud to be recognised for our people development efforts, especially in such a competitive category at the Glasgow Business Awards. People development is at the heart of everything we do and we strive to give our team the best opportunity to continue to grow and develop their careers. “I would like to thank the whole Glasgow team as this wouldn’t have been possible without the hard work they put in everyday and the positive contribution they make to our learning and development culture.” The awards, organised by Glasgow Chamber of Commerce, recognise forward-thinking and innovative Glasgow-based organisations.
The People Development category aims to award businesses which successfully promote and implement a learning environment, which in turn ensures organisational and individual success. Successful nominees in this category had to demonstrate a strategic commitment to development throughout the organisation, recognising the importance of supporting the workforce in their careers and continually adding to their skills.
The HLM Glasgow team were presented with the award at the glittering Glasgow Business Awards 2017 ceremony on Thursday 5 October 2017 in the Hilton Glasgow. For more information on HLM or if you would like to get involved in the internship programme visit: www.hlmarchitects.coms or follow @HLMArchitects on Twitter.
HLM is an international practice, it serves the Ireland and the UK with offices Belfast, London, Sheffield, Glasgow, Cardiff, Manchester and Plymouth. It also has offices in Johannesburg and Abu Dhabi.
7 Apr 2017 Plymouth Science Park by HLM
The stunning new £7 million building at Plymouth Science Park has now been shortlisted for a record four prestigious building and planning awards for its forward-thinking space-age design.
Standing at the entrance way to the park at Derriford, behind the city’s hospital, the new building is the most technologically advanced in the south west.
images from HLM Architects
1 Research Way has already been nominated for awards from the city’s Evening Herald newspaper and also the RICS (Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors) and to that clutch it has now added two more nominations from the prestigious Mitchelmores Awards.
They are finalists in the Commercial Project of the Year and Building of the Year categories.
Christian Jenkins, Director of Operations at Plymouth Science Park, said: “Plymouth Science Park is delighted to be shortlisted in two categories for these prestigious awards.
“We were absolutely clear from the outset on what the look and feel of 1 Research Way should be and we are more than satisfied with the results. As well as its visually striking looks and architectural features, its internal functionality and flexible working space was very attractive to businesses with the result that the building was 60% occupied within a week of opening.
“The units can accommodate 10-60 staff making it suitable to a wide range of businesses. Supported by the best ICT infrastructure in the region and a full range of on-site services, 1 Research Way has become the go-to place for aspiring tech and science businesses.”
Marketing technology company Intelligent Optimisations (IO) has already taken the top floor of the building and educational website business The Key has moved about 40 staff into a large open plan office taking up about 60 per cent of level one.
images from HLM Architects
One Research Way has 20,000sq ft of office space, and mixes open-plan offices with break-out areas to encourage more collaboration.
The building is fully serviced, with all bills, bar electricity and additional IT, included in the rent. It also has kitchens, toilets and showers and the front of the building features a huge glazed area, known as “the knuckle”, illuminated at night.
It was built by BAM Construction, from a design by Royal William Yard-based architects HLM. It is clad with zinc-coloured aluminium, features exterior wall glass “pop outs”, which have space for people to sit in, and inside there is a huge open atrium, capable of hosting seminars and conferences.
Winners of the Herald Awards will be announced at a glittering ceremony in the city on 20th April, the RICS Awards winners will be revealed at a ceremony in Bristol on 11th May and the Mitchelmores Awards will take place on 15th June in Exeter.
12 Sep 2016
HLM Architects BIM News
HLM associate joins panel of industry experts at BIM conference in Edinburgh
With the Scottish Government aiming to adopt a BIM Level 2 approach across public sector projects by April 2017, Paul Tunstall, associate at architectural practice HLM joins a panel of industry experts, architects and technology leaders at the BIM in Scotland conference in Edinburgh this month to illustrate how BIM theory can give competitive advantages to companies in Scotland.
Tunstall will discuss HLM’s broad experience of BIM and expertise in using it through the project lifecycle, starting from the initial decision on which platform to use through to challenges encountered in a large multinational implementation. As part of his presentation, Tunstall will also explore how he envisages the HLM practice and the wider architectural industry developing.
Providing architectural, landscape architecture, interior design and environmental design services, in recent years HLM has expanded operations to six offices in the UK and two others internationally.
HLM has a one-team culture which creates a platform for all its UK and overseas offices to share both workload and resources. This poses a challenging environment for its BIM activities to ensure consistency in quality and timely delivery.
“HLM was one of the first architectural practices in the UK to achieve certification through the Building Research Establishment’s (BRE) Business Certification Scheme, firmly establishing it as a leading BIM Level 2 compliant organisation,” said Tunstall.
“My presentation will explore the concept of ‘Wide Area BIM’ and demonstrate some of the systems and tools that help make it possible.”
Tunstall has been an employee of HLM for over 18 years, implementing CAD and BIM systems across the group and providing training and support for its team of over 200 employees. He leads a team of Information Managers having the technical skills to support HLM’s many software tools and systems, under a group-wide Technology Team.
The UK Government implemented a mandate for BIM on all of its public-sector projects in April of this year and Tunstall was instrumental in ensuring that HLM had the preparation and knowledge to undertake any project required to deliver BIM Level 2, well in advance of the deadline by guiding the practice through the BRE Business Certification Scheme.
As a member of the BuildingSMART organisation in the UK, he represents HLM in workshops and discussions to maintain HLM’s alignment with BIM and associated initiatives, both in the UK and internationally.
The BIM in Scotland conference is free to attend and takes place in Edinburgh on Wednesday 21 September 2016.
15 Apr 2016 MOD Training Base in Winchester image from architect The £250m Defence College of Logistics, Policing and Administration (DCPLA) at Worthy Down in Hampshire has received planning approval through delegated powers from Winchester City Council, marking the second and final application for the scheme known as Project Wellesley.
25 Sep 2013
HLM Group Completes Sidell Gibson Architects Deal With the Support of Irwin Mitchell
New Deal Follows Strategic Investment In Llewelyn Davies Brand
Law firm Irwin Mitchell has advised HLM on its acquisition of architecture, urban design and interiors practice, Sidell Gibson.
photo © Paul Riddle
HLM is architecture, landscape architecture, urban design, masterplanning, interior design and sustainability practice. In addition to its office in Sheffield, it has a presence in London, Glasgow, Belfast, Cardiff and Plymouth in the UK, as well as Johannesburg and Abu Dhabi.
The newly acquired practice will trade as Sidell Gibson and be run independently of HLM, operating from new offices in central London. The team will continue to build on its expertise in high quality commercial buildings, housing and restoration projects.
HLM Architects – Key Projects
Major buildings / developments by HLM, alphabetical:
Altnagelvin Area Hospital – New South Wing, Derry, Northern Ireland 2004-08 images from HLM Architects Altnagelvin Area Hospital Derry The £45m New South Wing is the third phase of works, but the first phase of new build clinical accommodation in this significant hospital redevelopment. It will provide replacement facilities for key services, including maternity and neo-natal, oncology, cardiac care, adult acute inpatients and rehabilitation, as well as a new patient records department and staff changing facilities.
Arundel Great Court – offices, London –
The Business Academy, Yarnton Way, Bexley, southeast London –
Clackmannanshire Community Healthcare Facility, Scotland 2005-09 images from HLM Architects A new integrated Health Centre for the people of Clackmannanshire. The facility comprises of a Health Centre with pharmacy and community patient services, Inpatient and Day Hospital Building and Community Mental Health Resource Centre with consulting rooms and day hospital accommodation on the ground floor with non-patient staff office above. The purpose was to establish an integrated health facility that meets the needs of the residents of Alloa and the wider population of Clackmannanshire.
Cornwall Ecotown, St. Austell, Cornwall, south west England 2010- images from HLM Architects As one of the first four Eco-Towns to be selected out of 57 initial submissions by the government in 2009, we entered this competition in St. Austell, Cornwall following our success with Future Works Eco Home, winning entry in Wales and our winning scheme for Scotland Housing EXPO. Following our successful Stage 1 submission, we were shortlisted as 1 of 25 to submit our Stage 2 entry. The Stage 2 decision will be made in June 2010 where we hope to be selected as 1 of a number of architects to develop the initial pilot scheme sites in St. Austell with an opportunity to apply our scheme designs to the wider context.
Cowbridge Comprehensive School, Wales 2010 image from HLM Architects Cowbridge Comprehensive This building by HLM lies in a very rural location just outside the market town of Cowbridge. It is the first of three secondary schools to be developed by the Vale of Glamorgan Council with funding from the Welsh Assembly Government. The school will accommodate 1550 pupils including a large 6th form intake of 350 students. Construction began in January 2009 and was compled in time for the new academic year of 2010.
Ellesmere Nursing Home, Chelsea, London, UK 2007 image from HLM Architects Ellesmere Nursing Home This building by HLM is located on Fulham Road, Chelsea, London. It is adjacent the Chelsea Westminster Hospital, and replaces the derelict home that existing on the site up to 2003. The nursing home and day centre is a 3 level courtyard arrangement, and have a combined (approximate) gross internal area of 4950m2 – the rest of the development on the upper levels comprises private apartments for sale.
The New Victoria Hospital, Glasgow, Scotland 2004-09 images from HLM Architects The new Victoria Hospital treats around 400,000 patients annually by offering integrated diagnostic and treatment services including outpatient clinics, day surgery, rehabilitation, and specialised emergency services, thereby introducing an ambulatory model of one stop care in South Glasgow based on the following key principles:-
• Increased accessibility to ambulatory care for the local community • Prevention of emergency work adversely affecting the efficient delivery of elective care • Improved quality of patient focused care • Streamlining of the patient journey to provide a one stop service • Achieving compatibility between healthcare delivery and technology in a fit for purpose building
Sale Town Centre Redevelopment, Trafford, Greater Manchester (Cheshire), England –
Mid Argyll Community Hospital and Integrated Care Centre, Scotland – image from HLM Scottish Hospital building
New Victoria Hospital, Glasgow, Scotland – Scottish Building
Passive House – Scotland’s Housing Expo, near Inverness, Scotland, UK 2010 photo from HLM Scotland’s Housing Expo
Queen’s Centre for Oncology & Haematology, Hull, Humberside, eastern England 2003-08 images from HLM Architects New Regional Cancer Centre for Humberside and North Lincolnshire providing cancer and haematology services on one site at Castle Hill Hospital. The scheme encompasses 6 linear accelerators, together with Outpatients and a Day Hospital, 100 beds in 4 wards and Pathology, Pharmacy and Medical Physics facilities. The building is located in a rural setting on the edge of the main hospital site, set into the Northerly hillside maximising views out to the countryside from all patient areas.
Woodview Learning Community, Whitleigh, Plymouth, Cornwall, south west England 2006-08 images from HLM Architects The objective was to consolidate and improve the current provision of education and community facilities and extend the range by the introduction of the Woodlands Physical Disabilities School and Hostel combined with the relocation of the local Youth Centre and Community Education. The new facility combines teaching and support facilities into one ‘campus’, creating a fully inclusive, functionally operational, secure and protected learning environment. The pioneering new campus provides for the educational needs of children of all ages through the following facilities.
Woolwich Civic Offices, London 2007- £45m For London Borough of Greenwich Civic Headquarters Woolwich Civic Offices
More design projects by HLM Architects online soon
Location: London, England, UK
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The New Victoria Hospital, Glasgow: image from HLM Architects
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27timescinema · 4 years
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By Bianca Fabbri (pics © Daniel Morawitz)
On the afternoon of September 5th, the lucky 27 Times Cinema ambassadors and members of the 2020 Jury of the Giornate degli Autori at the Venice International Film Festival had the chance to attend a unique meeting with members of the European Film Academy: EFA Director Marion Döring and EFA Head of Press and PR Pascal Edelmann.
Döring and Edelmann headed an all-inclusive meeting on the birth of the EFA, its development over the years and how, thanks to the development of technology and social media, the member countries of the Academy managed to create a strong bond to promote cinematic culture all over the EU.
Ms Döring has been connected with the European Film Academy since it started in 1988. In 1996 she became the Academy's director. Currently composed of 3,800 members from 48 countries, the EFA started off with only 40 members, firstly presided by Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, whose role is now in the hands of German filmmaker Wim Wenders. The European Union was still divided when the EFA was born, Berlin itself was divided prior to the fall of the Wall in 1989. Nonetheless, Döring stressed that even during such hard times, the EFA ambassadors always managed to keep strong ties thanks to the power of cinema.
“Cinema is a fantastic ambassador for tolerance, friendship and openness to be cherished” she said, comparing the bonding ability of cinema in those years to the one it still has now, capable of giving life to a project like “27 Times Cinema” which brings together young cinephiles from each country of the EU who also compose the jury of the Giornate degli Autori.
EFA members never stop striving to keep European cinema alive by creating brand new projects for the citizens of the Union. It is precisely this year at the 2020 Venice International Film Festival, that the EFA, in partnership with the International Documentary Film Festival of Amsterdam and the Rotterdam International Film Festival, launched an incredibly unique initiative: the International Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk. This innovative idea came from a place of solidarity and especially from the urge to protect fellow filmmakers and creators who live in dangerous and risky conditions specifically for the role they occupy in the industry. The EFA Director underlined the importance of this coalition, pointing out that today “democracy is in danger and therefore it’s important that we all stay together and don’t leave alone those who loose their freedom of speech and artistic freedom”.
However, the solidarity shared among EFA member countries does not end here: with the tragic occurring of the COVID-19 pandemic, which began early this year, EFA Board members managed to keep collaborating and helping each other, even during lockdown, in order to deal together with the challenges each country was facing.
“Stay engaged Europeans”. These are the closing words Marion Döring spoke cherishing the GDA young ambassadors and highlighting the strong impact that the voices of their generation can have in the promotion of European cinema.
Head of Press and PR Pascal Edelmann contributed to the talk by sharing his knowledge on press work and promotion of EFA initiatives following different guidelines. Through press releases and publications he manages to stay in contact with both EFA members and the audience. Around 250 journalists and 20 to 50 photographers attend the European Film Academy Awards, continuously updated thanks to the thorough work carried out by the Press and PR supervisors: press conferences are held every year after the Award Ceremony. EFA awards were traditionally voted only by members and comprised some honorary awards as well, but with the introduction of the EFA People’s Choice Award, now merging with the EU LUX Prize, Edelman explains how the importance of press and PR further increased in that respect. As a matter of fact, the EFA People’s Choice Award is exclusively voted for by the public. As to this Press and PR supervisors’ job is elucidating the voting procedure to the journalists who will then communicate directly with the voters: the European audience.
As is well known, social media is becoming increasingly important in our society. For this matter, Valentina Neumann (Alphapanda), who manages EFA’s social media channels, gave out a clear illustration on how online platforms are concretely changing the way through which news and updates on European cinema are shared. Neumann also highlighted how the main 4 channels (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube) differ from one another in reaching various kinds of audiences. YouTube is the last platform EFA was introduced to, yet one of the most influencing ones: it now serves as an archive of videos of the past Award editions, including speeches and interviews of participants. One very interesting initiative is the “My 3 Minutes with EFA” series: interviewers have short conversations with cast members, asking them general questions about cinema and their passion for it.
The goal here is undoubtedly reaching as many people as possible, belonging to any age-range or EU country who all share a strong devotion and interest for cinema.
Now is when the 27 Times Cinema young ambassadors are called upon: coming from various different countries they are the ones who have the strongest opportunity to widen the audience and make European Cinema as well-known as possible, in the hope of opening this door to everyone and welcoming them to the ‘community movie theater' the EU can become.
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justforbooks · 4 years
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John Horton Conway: the world’s most charismatic mathematician known for the Game of Life whose inventions ranged from the surreal numbers to the Doomsday Rule
John Horton Conway, who has died aged 82 after contracting Covid-19, was one of the most prolific and charismatic British mathematicians of the 20th century. He was active in many branches of mathematics, including group theory, coding theory, knot theory, geometry, number theory and quadratic forms, as well as in recreational mathematics.
An iconoclastic academic, he held court for over half a century in mathematics departments worldwide, notably at Cambridge and Princeton universities. Although he thought it one of his lesser accomplishments, John is best known for his late 1960s invention of the Game of Life. It is an “organic life” simulation carried out on a square grid of cells, each of which is alive or dead according to how many living neighbours it has. Despite the simplicity of John’s defining rules, it turned out that anything that can be algorithmically computed can be done so within the zero-player Game of Life. While John’s approach was done with pen and paper, the game was a catalyst for computer programmers in the 70s and is now viewed as a watershed development in the field of cellular automata.
John, together with Elwyn Berlekamp and Richard Guy, is credited with co-founding the field of combinatorial game theory. That is the mathematical analysis of games such as noughts and crosses, draughts, chess and Go, as well as a wealth of original games that John and assorted collaborators devised over the decades, such as Phutball (short for Philosopher’s Football), a two-person board game played on a grid using one white stone (the ball) and numerous black stones (representing men), Hackenbush, and Sprouts. This led to a joint book, Winning Ways for Your Mathematical Plays (1982).
In the early 70s, John came up with the definitive refinement of what is now known as the Monster Group. Groups arise from the study of symmetry of objects in mathematics and in nature. For instance, the group of symmetries of an equilateral triangle has six things in it: three rotations and three flips. There are standard “atomic building blocks” of all finite groups of symmetries, which are well understood, and 26 strange additional ones, called sporadic groups, of which the Monster Group, predicted independently by two mathematicians, Bernd Fischer and Bob Griess, is the largest. In 1973 Griess finally constructed the Monster itself, and John then came up with a simpler construction. This group has 808,017,424,794,512,875,886,459,904,961,710,757,005,754,368,000,000,000 symmetries in it. That is vast beyond comprehension, and about 1,000 times the current estimate for the number of atoms in the Earth.
A few years later, John went further. Along with his former PhD student Simon Norton, he came up with the Monstrous Moonshine conjecture, connecting group theory with the seemingly unrelated study of modular forms. Another of John’s former students, Richard Borcherds, got a Fields medal (one of the two highest honours in mathematics) in 1998 for his successful proof of the conjecture.
John often said that his proudest invention was the surreal numbers, a unifying number system that he conceived in the late 60s, which encompassed ordinary numbers as well as those that are infinitely small or large. He was also particularly pleased with the free will theorem in quantum mechanics from early in the current century, which he formulated with Simon Kochen. In his own words, it says that “if experimenters have free will, then so do elementary particles”.
John was a prodigious mental calculator too. He delighted in being challenged to shout out the day of the week for any randomly chosen date in history, which he could do using his own so-called Doomsday Rule; his methods were adapted and streamlined from Lewis Carroll’s 1887 algorithm. He attributed his success in so many different arenas to his habit of always working simultaneously on several unrelated problems: he might be stuck on most of them but suddenly have an idea leading to a breakthrough on another one.
While many of John’s creations were the products of his own fertile mind, he thrived on collaboration. His best known book, the Atlas of Finite Groups (1985), was co-authored by Norton, Robert Curtis, Richard Parker and Robert Wilson. Around 1976, he helped Roger Penrose refine the analysis of what we now know as Penrose tiles, and he came up with the catchy terms kite and dart for the two basic shapes from which they are made.
John left his mark on the groundbreaking book series The Art of Computer Programming. The computer scientist and author of that work, Donald Knuth, who also wrote a book about Conway’s surreal numbers, said: “Although John was a pure mathematician, he covered so many bases that I’ve cited him more than 25 times (so far) for different contributions to The Art of Computer Programming.”
The American writer Martin Gardner helped to popularise much of John’s output in his Scientific American columns, going back to the late 50s. A decade ago, John worked with the editor Peter Renz on updated versions of some of Gardner’s books of collected columns, again contributing fresh results of significance, including a new proof of Morley’s theorem about triangles. “Anyone who has sat with John has been touched, changed for ever,” said Renz. “He had a way of refining things to their purest forms.”
Born in Liverpool, John was the son of Agnes (nee Boyce) and Cyril Horton Conway. His father was a chemistry lab technician at the Liverpool Institute high school for boys, which John, and later Paul McCartney and George Harrison of the Beatles, attended. He then went to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, gaining his BA in 1959. A PhD (1964) followed, under Harold Davenport.
He became an assistant lecturer at Cambridge, later rising to be professor of mathematics. In 1987 he took up the position of John von Neumann professor of applied and computational mathematics at Princeton University, New Jersey.
While he was reportedly shy as a young man, over time John developed a disarming charm and an extrovert Pied Piper persona. He earned a reputation for delivering one brilliant lecture after another, and his classes at both Cambridge and Princeton were invariably oversubscribed. His infectious enthusiasm turned on generations of young people to the joy of research mathematics.
His biographer, Siobhan Roberts, dubbed him “the world’s most lovable egomaniac”, adding, “He is Archimedes, Mick Jagger, Salvador Dalí and Richard Feynman, all rolled into one.”
John was elected FRS, a fellow of the Royal Society, in 1981 – following which he told people he was now officially a Filthy Rotten Swine – and was the first recipient of the London Mathematical Society’s Pólya prize in 1987. He was awarded the Nemmers prize in mathematics (1998), the Leroy P Steele prize for mathematical exposition (2000), and the Joseph Priestley award (2001-02), and received honorary doctorates from the University of Liverpool (2001) and Jacobs University, Bremen (2015). He retired in 2013, when he became emeritus professor at Princeton.
In a 2014 video for the online channel Numberphile, John discussed getting over his feelings of inadequacy in his 20s, facing mortality in his 70s, and his lingering mathematical wish to really understand why the extraordinarily large Monster Group exists.
His first two marriages, to Eileen Howe and Larissa Queen, ended in divorce. He is survived by his third wife, Diana (nee Cutsogeorge), whom he married in 2001, and their son, Gareth; four daughters, Susie, Rosie, Ellie and Annie, from his first marriage; two sons, Alex and Oliver, from his second marriage; three grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
• John Horton Conway, mathematician, born 26 December 1937; died 11 April 2020
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The Stroke Diva Fabulous Radio Show
The Stroke Diva Fabulous Radio Show
Fabulous and Fascinating interview today with Ron Beleno! Beleno is a leading member of AGE-WELL, Canada’s Technology and Aging Network, where he chairs the Older Adult and Caregiving Advisory Committee and was recently the recipient of the AGE-WELL 2020 Honorary Fellows Award. Ron an active advocate for dementia, caregiving, aging, and research communities, shared his story about caring for his…
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The Stroke Diva Fabulous Radio Show
Meet Ron Beleno on Monday, April 12 at 5:00 PM EST. Ron is an active advocate for dementia, caregiving, aging, and research communities. He is a leading member of AGE-WELL, Canada’s Technology and Aging Network, where he chairs the Older Adult and Caregiving Advisory Committee and was recently the recipient of the AGE-WELL 2020 Honorary Fellow Award. Beleno was a featured speaker at the…
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