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TMU Lecture Series: Alison Brooks

Alison Brooks is one of the UK’s most highly awarded and internationally acclaimed architects. A native of Guelph, she studied architecture at the University of Waterloo before moving to the UK in 1988. Since founding her practice in 1996 she has emerged as one of the UK’s most inventive architects with works encompassing urban design and housing, higher education buildings, private houses, and public buildings for the arts. In addition to receiving over 80 awards for design achievement she is the only UK architect to have received all three of the profession’s most prestigious architectural awards: the RIBA Stirling Prize, the Manser Medal (twice), and the Stephen Lawrence Prize.

Alison Brooks’ unique architectural approach springs from invested research into specific geographies, climate and cultures of each project so that her design solutions to emerge as both unique and relevant to the constituencies they serve. This is beautifully exemplified by her recently completed Cohen Quadrangle at Exeter College, Oxford. The first Oxford College to be designed by a female architect, this building demonstrates the conceptual rigour, sculptural quality and ingenious detailing that is her practice trademark.

Alison has dedicated much of her professional career to housing design and has completed over 2,000 dwellings across the UK, including the Stirling Prize-winning Accordia, Cambridge; Stirling Prize shortlisted Newhall Be, Ely Court and Cadence, King’s Cross. Recent high-profile commissions include mixed-use, high density urban developments in London, Vancouver, and Toronto. Private houses continue to serve as a focussed platform for the practice’s design research, from the much-celebrated 2001 VXO House to 2021 RIBA House of the Year, Windward House. In the arts and education sector she is currently designing an Entrance Building for Homerton College and an art gallery in Cambridge. Her cultural projects include the Folkestone Performing Arts Centre, a radiant beacon for Folkestone’s arts communities, and The Smile, her world-famous timber pavilion for the 2016 London Design Festival. She has been invited to exhibit her practice’s work at the Venice Architecture Biennale three times.

Alison has become a public voice for the profession advocating the role of women in architecture, the resurgence of building craft and the value of timber as an expressive, low carbon building technology. In 2012 she was awarded Housing Architect of the Year and Architect of the Year. She was subsequently awarded 2013 AJ Woman Architect of the Year in recognition of her work in housing, regeneration, and education. In 2017 Alison was appointed Fellow and Royal Designer for Industry by the Royal Society of Arts and selected as London Mayor’s Design Advocate. She was also honoured with the 2017 AJ 100 Contribution to the Profession Award. In 2020 her practice was awarded Dezeen Architect of the Year and BD Housing Architect of the Year for the second time.

Alison has served CABE / Design Council as National Design Review Panel Chair for over ten years. She was member of the 2009 Government advisory body The Farrell Review of Architecture and the Built Environment, juror for the RIBA Awards group from 2010-2015, the 2011 Stirling Prize and 2010 Lubetkin Prize as well as the 2022 RIBA Gold Medal Selection Committee.

Alison Brooks BES, BARCH, DOC.ENG (HON. CAUSA), RIBA, FRSA, RDI FOUNDER & CREATIVE DIRECTOR 2 Alison Brooks has contributed to architectural education for over fifteen years as External Examiner for the AA, the Bartlett, University of Central London, and the Universities of . She currently teaches a Master in Collective Housing Studio at ETSAM, Universidad Politecnica of Madrid, and was Spring 2023 Gensler Visiting Critic at Cornell AAP. In 2018 Alison was appointed as the John T. Dunlop Design Critic in Architecture at Harvard GSD. She previously taught a Diploma School Unit at the Architectural Association Diploma School from 2008-2010, where she served as External Examiner from 2011-2019. Alison lectures internationally on architecture and urban design, most recently at Cornell AAP, University at Buffalo, the Budapest 20th International Convention of Architecture, IE University, Siza Talks at the Serralves Museum, among others. She also serves on numerous international design competition juries, including the Canada Council jury for the 2023 Venice Biennale Canada Pavilion.

In 2017, Alison Brooks released “Ideals Then Ideas”, a book outlining the four core ‘ideals’ guiding her architectural work: Authenticity, Generosity, Civicness, and Beauty. Her latest publication, a practice monograph produced in partnership with international architectural publisher TC Cuadernos, was released in Feburary 2024.

Alison was awarded an Alumni Achievement Award by the University of Waterloo in 2014, which was followed by a 2016 Doctorate of Engineering (Hon Causa).

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