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    Norman Foster, Virgil Abloh and more share their thoughts on the global impact of Covid-19

    One year ago today, the World Health Organisation officially declared coronavirus a global pandemic. Twenty of the world’s leading designers, including Thomas Heatherwick, Kelly Hoppen and Sevil Peach, gave us their views on how it has changed the world. The pandemic has been the most dramatic disruption to human activity in a generation. For many designers, it has been a time to refocus and rethink how we design products, buildings and cities.
    “It has challenged us to reassess the ‘old normals’ that we had based and organised our lives around,” explained interior designer Peach.
    “Coronavirus has sounded an alarm”
    This includes paying more attention to the environment and the impact that humans are having on the Earth.
    “The coronavirus has sounded an alarm,” said Sun Dayong, founding partner of architecture studio Penda, “in effect, reminding people to care for the earth and the environment.”
    Many of the designers were positive that the pandemic will lead to change, with more focus placed on people.
    “It has made us value space and air, said Sarah Wigglesworth, founder of Sarah Wigglesworth Architects. “Hopefully, it has reorientated our focus on the fact that buildings are about people.”
    “Disasters have been catalysts for major changes in architecture” 
    Designer Heatherwick agreed: “We’ve seen before that disasters have been catalysts for major changes in architecture.”
    “So I hope the real positive legacy of this terrible pandemic will be a realisation that there’s no longer a place for yet more lazy soulless developments and buildings.”

    Coronavirus offers “a blank page for a new beginning” says Li Edelkoort

    To make these changes, Off-White founder Virgil Abloh believes that designers will need to be adaptable.
    “The pandemic, to me, exposed the need for businesses, designers, creators, even entire countries, to be able to adapt,” he said.
    “The structure of the city is bound to change”
    The architects and designers believe that the pandemic will have a lasting impact on our cities, with Lina Ghotmeh telling Dezeen: “The structure of the city is more than any time, bound to change.”
    Nikoline Dyrup Carlsen, co-founder of Spacon & X, agreed that cities are changing, observing that people are moving out of Copenhagen “to be closer to nature”.
    “This will definitely reframe how we approach design and architecture in urban as well as in natural surroundings,” she said.
    Many of the designers believe that the pandemic may provide the impetus to create better public spaces in our cities.
    “[They will be a] more open attitude of mind by the public, civic leaders and politicians to change in the public domain,” said architect Norman Foster.
    “The pandemic has proven that mobility in cities can be moderated posing an opportunity to reduce the use of cars, and therefore the CO2 emissions,” added Ingrid Moye, co-founder of Mexican studio Zeller & Moye.
    “Cities are not dead and will come back”
    Although cities will change, they “are not dead and will come back,” said Carlo Ratti Associati founder Carlo Ratti.
    “They have endured damaging pandemics in the past and yet in the following centuries, we continued crowding its narrow streets and theatres,” he said.

    “In the future home, form will follow infection”

    Chinese architect Ma Yansong believes the challenge will be creating cities that are safe, but not isolating places.
    “Even if the pandemic might continue through the next couple of years, an ideal city should still reflect our ideal for living, instead of being a capsule that will only isolate people,” he said.
    “Moments of crisis can also be seen as opportunities for change”
    On a personal level, many designers said the pandemic had allowed them to become more focused on their work without the distraction of industry events or overseas client visits.
    “Despite the negative aspects that the pandemic has brought, moments of crisis can also be seen as opportunities for change,” said Moye. “This pause in our hectic lifestyles has given me a chance to refocus priorities.”
    Overall, architect Sam Jacob believes that this has been a time of reflection that will shape architecture and design for years to come.
    “It feels like there’s been quite a bit of soul searching amongst the design and architecture communities over the past year,” he said. “Many long overdue issues have come to the fore.”
    Top image is an illustration of the coronavirus particle by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
    Read below for the full interviews:

    Virgil AblohCEO, Off-White, Milan
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    The pandemic, to me, exposed the need for businesses, designers, creators, even entire countries, to be able to adapt. I see the same challenge being posed in this realm of architecture and design – as creators we must be adaptable and fluid in our skills and our practices, but the places and structures we’re creating need this ability as well.
    This is something I had kind of already started thinking about, the need for spaces to be easily transformed. When I was designing the Off-White Miami flagship with Samir Bantal of AMO we wanted to create a retail space that essentially can outlive retail.
    Things like movable walls and other elements that make a space multifunctional are not only interesting from a design perspective, but they’re necessary for staying ahead of this ever-changing tide.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    I think we’re going to see a lot of the same social and political movements that were brought to the forefront of our collective consciousness reflected in design for years to come.
    Things like transparency and openness, as we’ve seen society demand of politics and their leaders, their police and their justice systems. The idea of personal expression and celebrating differences – customising your space like you do your own style with the clothes you wear and the pieces you buy.

    Norman FosterFounder, Foster + Partners, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design? 
    More open attitude of mind by the public, civic leaders and politicians to change in the public domain.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Acceleration and magnification of existing trends to the extent that in the short term they might seem like new trends.
    What have you learnt?
    A greater appreciation and sensitivity towards those who serve us – obviously health workers but also others who make our urbanities function.

    Kelly HoppenFounder, Kelly Hoppen Interiors, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    One of the biggest surprises for me came at the beginning of the pandemic when there was an influx of work, particularly international work. The speed and demand of work that came through during the pandemic provided an opportunity to grow further. In my view, the industry is booming, however, the requirements for design are changing.
    Having worked in Asia for many years, we understood many of these requirements, but this was the first time I understood them personally and realised the impact they would have on the field.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Long-term, interiors and architecture will have to be created with hygiene and practicality at the forefront. Both vision and design details will need to be adapted to ensure space adheres to everyday living, with the additional demands highlighted by Covid in a post-pandemic world.
    What have you learnt?
    In spite of strict travel restrictions, the inability to visit sites and engage in other practical activities meant we had to think outside the box quickly.
    We had come up with different solutions to fulfil things we could only do in person, for example handling an installation for a couture job. Being able to overcome these challenges has been both exciting and rewarding, and has also taught me about the endless possibilities that exist when it comes to showcasing international design and architecture.

    Sun DayongFounding partner, Penda, Beijing
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    I think the coronavirus pandemic has made people realise that having architectural spaces that are secure and safeguarded is extremely important. In times past, the primary function of architectural structures was to shelter human beings from the elements and predatory animals. In the future, protecting people from viruses will be one of the important functions of architecture.
    This aspect will be paid more and more attention to in design. For example, the need to revise the distribution ratio of open space and private space in spatial layouts will promote the forming of new design specifications; and the need for sterilization and sterilization technology in architectural materials will instigate the production of new products. This will undoubtedly lead to changes in the way future buildings are designed.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    I think the coronavirus pandemic has made people realise that human beings are vulnerable to nature and that we cannot ignore the impact of the earth’s environment on our lives. In the past, people were content to stay in air-conditioned rooms or a comfortable car, without giving a second thought to the environment or nature.
    It was easy to ignore news of global warming or rising sea levels – it seemed those issues were just the dry concerns of environmental experts, empty claims in the advertisements of real estate developers. But the emergence of the coronavirus has made everyone realise that these problems are, in fact, very real.
    The pandemic has been massively damaging and costly worldwide. It is conceivable that if other, more severe environmental problems develop, many more people’s lives will be adversely affected.
    The coronavirus has sounded an alarm, in effect reminding people to care for the earth and the environment. As a shaper of the environment, architects should seriously consider sustainable design strategies, and put forward feasible suggestions for shaping a healthy environment in the future.
    What have you learnt?
    The pandemic has given me the opportunity to stay at home and live with my family for an extended period of time. It has made me realise the importance of relationships in general, and that good family relations are the baseline for having a happy life.
    For this type of harmony to be formed, frank communication and heart-to-heart communication are really essential. Architects can help people create beautiful and warm spaces, but a happy life is a collective effort created by everyone – and each person is the architect of their own happiness.
    Love the people around us and build happiness with love. I think this is what every professional architect should keep in mind, and learn to “create with love”.

    Joyce WangFounder, Joyce Wang Studio, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design? 
    It’s made it socially acceptable to be a bit of a hermit and to socially distance. Restaurants and hotels were becoming social houses before the pandemic. Now we are seeing project briefs that call for a balance of social and anti-social spaces to be designed.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Use of naturally sterilising finishes and materials for high-touch points like doorknobs and faucets, people will still yearn for tactility so am hoping it doesn’t all migrate to sensor/touchless devices.
    What have you learnt?
    We, humans, are super resilient and can adapt to be happy, creative and even thrive in the most awkward of circumstances.

    Thomas HeatherwickFounder, Heatherwick Studio, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    Even before the global pandemic, there was already an immense and rapidly-growing problem of many un-human, sterile places being clumsily created around the world. Apart from the occasional predictably-special arts building or rich person’s house, cities have been increasingly made up of repetitious new developments and districts that lack life, human interest and joy and generally don’t make people feel good to be there.
    As we’ve been forced to immerse ourselves in the digital realm during the pandemic, we’ve discovered that technology in our homes can sometimes provide a better alternative to crappy public places.
    For me it’s exciting that the responsibility is now back on us – the designers, architects, developers, and planners – to start making an impact again by creating inspiring public places that people will cherish and want to spend time in.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    I believe that one long term impact of coronavirus will be that we’ll value places that bring us together a little bit more. But I also believe we’ll be looking for places that better reflect the true diversity of our society.
    For the last hundred years, architecture has been a closed profession that tends to be led by like-minded people with similar backgrounds. We’ve seen before that disasters have been catalysts for major changes in architecture.
    I hope there can now be a new entrepreneurial spirit after the pandemic that allows more people to be unafraid of thinking they can have a voice in architecture even if they don’t necessarily want to design the sort of buildings they currently see around them. I also now personally hope there will be opportunities for far more diversity in the types of buildings that are being made.
    What have you learnt?
    I’ve always been fascinated by public shared experience – and believe passionately in advocating for great public spaces that help us connect better with each other but, deprived of meeting up with each other for a year, this is now something we crave more than ever.
    I hate seeing missed opportunities that don’t adequately serve us and our communities and society as a whole. So I hope the real positive legacy of this terrible pandemic will be a realisation that there’s no longer a place for yet more lazy soulless developments and buildings.
    Instead, we must strive harder to create places that galvanize and inspire people. Whatever sustainability metrics and credentials they claim to possess; unless we have the real passion of people who use and experience the buildings and spaces we design, they will never be truly sustainable.

    Ma YansongFounder, MAD Architects, Beijing
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    One of the biggest impacts is, the pandemic changed our ways of living and working. Lack of face-to-face communication and more reliance on e-meetings in some ways more important for us, but it does prevent us from engaging in usual conversations which are more interactive. The industry in China is almost back to normal after a year.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    “Sharing” used to be one of the most important agenda in the industry. We used to make a lot of efforts to providing more open space to stimulate social interactions.
    However, the pandemic led to more discussions on isolation and social distancing, rather than sharing and co-living. However, in the long run, public space will still be the foundation for sharing our cities, and architects will face challenging times to reconsider other meanings of public space.
    Even if the pandemic might continue through the next couple of years, an ideal city should still reflect our ideal for living, instead of being a capsule that will only isolate people.
    What have you learnt?
    The pandemic is huge for us who are living on this planet at this age. But if we look at linear history, the pandemic might be just the tip of the iceberg. Nature still dominates the world. It makes me think about the role of an architect. He or she can be alive only for several decades, but what can an architect create for the generations, or a longer run, contribute to civilisation, or even greater, this planet?

    Nikoline Dyrup CarlsenCo-founder, Spacon & X, Copenhagen
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    I think we have only seen the early impacts of Covid 19, but already now we see at Spacon&X how the pandemic has caused us to work differently. New digital tools and processes have found their way into our office, optimising our ways to develop, present and produce our design.
    We’ve been forced to present digitally and to implement new software, and it’s been a game-changer for us. We’ve even worked with virtual design and architecture, where the end result is digital – very interesting new possibilities!
    What will the long-term impact be? We founded Spacon & X on ideas of how to deal with the shortage of space in urban areas with explosively growing populations. For the first time in many years, more people are moving out of Copenhagen to be closer to nature, which we see as a partially corora-triggered trend. This will definitely reframe how we approach design and architecture in urban as well as in natural surroundings.
    Working with office design and space management, we have also experienced how Covid has boosted the fluidity between working physically at the office vs at home or anywhere else. “Activity-based work” is becoming the standard, meaning we have to come up with new solutions for office workers to feel comfortable not having their own work station, and office spaces to feel vibrant even when they are half or two thirds empty.
    What have you learnt? I’ve learnt how much value it has to be agile and flexible, Spacon&X would have suffered if we would not have been as agile and ready to identify new possibilities and adjust our plans.
    I’ve learnt how powerful collective movements are. Experiencing how a society/a world can change behaviour that quickly and efficiently. I would never have thought that possible before.
    I’ve also learned how much I love my job, what I do and all the people I work with! Everyone at Spacon&X has worked together in getting through this period, approaching it with an open mind, I think we are a collectively stronger office today than before Covid!:)

    Ingrid MoyeCo-founder, Zeller & Moye, Mexico City
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    Through this pandemic, we are experiencing a lack of human contact. Cities, architecture, and design are those tangible means to human encounters, elemental to our lives.
    The pandemic has proven that mobility in cities can be moderated posing an opportunity to reduce the use of cars, and therefore the CO2 emissions. It’s, therefore, an opportunity to design cities for people, not for cars.
    The rigid ‘single use’ in architecture and design appears out-of-date. Architecture and design should become more flexible and adaptable. Hybrid buildings could then cope better with emergency scenarios, and extend their own lifespans.
    Design and architecture will need to re-focus on the well-being of users, providing safer environments for human interaction. Covid-19 has reminded us that the human species forms part of a larger ecosystem that we need to live in harmony with. Architecture and design have the responsibility to make a positive impact on our environment.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    I hope it will be the awareness of recovering our endangered ecosystem, after facing our vulnerability as a species during this pandemic.
    What have you learnt?
    Despite the negative aspects that the pandemic has brought, moments of crisis can also be seen as opportunities for change. This pause in our hectic lifestyles has given me a chance to refocus priorities.

    Carlo RattiFounder, Carlo Ratti Associati, Turin
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    Covid highlighted the irrelevance of many architects’ obsession with form – it forced us to think big again and tackle the key issues of our present (environmental crisis, technological transformations, inequalities) – which the pandemic has put into the spotlight.
    Also, after countless Zoom calls in pyjamas, we can say the domestic and professional environments are getting increasingly blurred! With that, we need to rethink the design of our homes and offices.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    A change of paradigm in housing as well as planning: from the separation of functions (I work in a different place from where I live) to the simultaneity of functions (I work and live in the same place). This prompts us to think about a new Existenzminimum [minimum living standards] for the 21st century.
    I would like to make another point. Cities are not dead and will come back. They have endured damaging pandemics in the past – in the 14th century Venice lost 60 per cent of its population because of the black death and yet, in the following centuries, we continued crowding its narrow streets and theatres.
    What have you learnt?
    Travelling less is not necessarily a bad thing. It allows us to reconnect with places and focus on our civic duties.

    Sevil PeachCo-founder, SevilPeach, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    It has challenged us to reassess the “old normals” that we had based and organised our lives around. We need to reimagine what they should be and what they should provide if we were to re-invent them today.
    This is particularly relevant to our homes, which we have rapidly had to adapt as best as we can so it is able to properly support us throughout our lockdown days.
    This need for adaptations also refers to our workplace, which will need to reinvent itself to remain relevant and to be a place we wish & choose to go to.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Architecture and design need to regain their inclusiveness and human-centricity, responding to real human needs and emotions, that our solutions need to be sustainable both at an environmental, economic and personal level, plus adaptable and responsive to changing needs.
    What have you learnt?
    How much we thrive on human interaction. How important spontaneity and collaboration is to the design and creative processes. How pleasant it is to reimagine our working day to migrate from our desk to an armchair, to the kitchen table, to look out at the garden, or to even to be able to work out in the garden and fresh air.

    Astrid KleinCo-founder, Klein Dytham Architecture, Tokyo
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    It has become clear that we need more open, green, common, public spaces that are accessible to all. The densely packed floor plans don’t look ‘safe’ anymore.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    In order to be able to compete with the comfort of your home, office and retail spaces need to turn into attractive destinations, appealing to physical and mental wellbeing and be conducive to simply hanging out.
    What have you learnt?
    With fewer business trips, commutes, out of office meetings, work has become more focused, productive and daily schedules have become more work/life balance, and there is less stress getting all dressed up every day!

    Stefano BoeriFounder, Stefano Boeri Architetti, Milan
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    We must ask ourselves if we think we can fully grasp the power of this tragedy and thus try to think of a different way of inhabiting the planet, the cities, the spaces of everyday life.
    In a planet that is heading towards the great challenge of a new and necessary alliance between cities (until now the maximum expression of human civilisation) and the world of forests, woods, mountains, oceans, urban realities must become transnational and archipelago metropolises; metropolises that encompass portions of nature in their extension.
    What do you think the major long-term impact of coronavirus will be on architecture and design?Cities, in addition to opening up to nature, must change in their very structure: the great attractors of crowds and congestion on which they are born are in great difficulty today.
    We should begin to think of an urban life in which every citizen has basic necessities at a reasonable distance, within a geographical radius of 500 meters and a time range of 15/20 minutes; on foot or, at most, by bicycle.

    Sabine MarcelisFounder, Studio Sabine Marcelis, Rotterdam
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    The way in which we communicate our ideas. The surge of new programs that bring ideas to life when we can’t physically present ideas. The newfound importance of the home and the home office.
    And the fact that people are investing in their homes. Shifting from global back to local again (working with production companies/ photographers etc close to home instead of flying to or flying in people from all over the world).
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Communication of ideas. The shift from office work to working from home. Offices will need to be designed with importance put on hygiene and distance keeping. Zoom-rooms and smaller rooms for online meetings where your background plays a big role will be important spaces in the office also.
    What have you learnt?
    Not every meeting needs to be a plane trip (but some definitely would be better if they were!). The importance of the dynamic within a team. I feel incredibly fortunate that my team works so well together. Everyone is in sync with each other and we don’t get lost in miscommunications at all.
    It’s incredibly difficult to communicate complex ideas which are all about experience and tactility from remote locations and at least this challenge is only from our team to clients and not within the team itself.

    Lina GhotmehFounder, Lina Ghotmeh Architectures, Paris
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    I think this pandemic had impacted first our space-time relation, we had discovered a new spatial dimension through our extensive exploration of the digital immaterial world. This is a new space that may need a new form of architecture and design to render it more humane and more distinctive.
    Exploring extensive remote work had also allowed many people to explore the countryside as a better context for working. This highlighted the visceral need we have to be close to nature affecting the relationship we have with the city. We can question here its traditional role as a centralized economic hub. The structure of the city is more than any time, bound to change.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Finally, we have concrete proof that the zoned city can no longer be sustainable. It is neither durable nor resilient. We cannot build by segregating functions: nature, living, working, leisure, culture etc. contingent mixing is essential for the adaptability of our living structures.
    Homes will become more and more places of work, mutable meeting points; museums more productive places; nature inherent to architecture. The 15 minutes city, the city of proximities, as Paris is working on, is evidence, it will also transform the programmatic regulatory paradigms that underlay our architectural world.
    What have you learnt?
    I always thought the notion of boundaries between nations is questionable, this virus proved more concretely that the world is deeply interconnected, this applies today to this virus crisis we are all facing but is also a reminder that it applies to more invisible systems that drive the dynamics behind our built world: economic systems, energy consumption, climate change, waste. These have direct consequences on all of us and need to be challenged, addressed at every level professionally & personally.

    Sam JacobFounder, Sam Jacob Studio, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    The pandemic has shifted our perspective, forcing us – if only literally – to look at the world from a different place. It quieted the industry noise a little, that fog that often obscures the context of our actions as designers. No ceremonies, no industry events, a break in the conveyor belt of so-called career progression.
    There’s been much more focus on the work in hand. And more time to think. It feels like there’s been quite a bit of soul searching amongst the design and architecture communities over the past year. Many long overdue issues have come to the fore. But let’s see, as we unlock, how much we’ve really learnt about ourselves, and how our ideas of how architecture and design can remake the world in new and different ways have changed.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    Feels like there will be quite an impact. A lot of previous plans and assumptions have been thrown into disarray. And whether we like it or not (or whether it’s for the right reasons) we’re going to have to figure out new ways for design to work in the world. Smaller budgets, fewer blockbusters. Could this mean a design approach that is more nimble, humble, and full of pragmatic imagination? Might it mean a new sharper focus, a directness and a creative response that works within the reality and needs of our circumstances socially, economically, environmentally? We can only hope.
    What have you learnt?
    I think the key thing I’ve realised over the last year is the value of relationships. Of working with clients who care, with collaborators who engage in constructive dialogue, with my own team who have gone above and beyond. For all of the myriad difficulties we had, there has been something optimistic and intensely human about the ways we have found to work together.
    In some ways, even over Zoom, more intimate and engaged than assembling in boardrooms. Some of the hierarchies and professional silos that usually separate us or set us against each other have softened. Perhaps there’s been more understanding of the difficulties inherent in making a good project happen, and recognition of the efforts of everyone involved. Most of all that design process is a process of working together, the sum of the efforts that we put into it.

    Doriana FuksasCo-founder, Studio Fuksas, Rome
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    A simple sentence: “Città, less aesthetics more ethics’, the 7th International Architecture Exhibition for The 2000 Venice Biennale, curated by Fuksas architects. For more than twenty years we have been reflecting on the cities and on the contemporary house model.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    With the pandemic, we have all discovered ourselves scared and unprepared, but I believe this was an opportunity to start thinking and reflecting especially on our living spaces and houses.
    After an initial moment of great disorientation, we tried to make the most of the emergency by exploring and investigating new design solutions which could adapt both the new and existing projects.
    The world of architecture will surely have to keep up with the enormous change, primarily social, that this emergency has led to. The role of the designer-architect can only adapt to the new challenges, using technological innovation to design objects and buildings that adapt to the new way of living, different from the one we were used to.
    2020 is the true beginning of the 3rd Millennium for architecture and design, that of a revolution in terms of housing equipment, space distribution, new transport organization, green energy utilization.
    What have you learnt?
    To appreciate and don’t waste but preserve what we have got. I think I have also learnt the importance of the house as first aid, as fluid space, able to accept transformations and to host different functions following different needs.
    We are proud of the achievement reached by built 10 years ago: The Rome New EUR Congress Center ‘the Cloud’ became the biggest Coronavirus 19 vaccination hub in Europe.

    Sofia Lagerkvist and Anna LindgrenFounders, Front, Stockholm
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design? 
    During this time designers have found more time on their hands to be creative and experiment. They have found new platforms for showing and exhibiting and channels to sell their work, of course through social media but also the gallery scene has provided different ways to sell at the high-end market.
    We think this will continue and give independence to the individual designer, cutting out the middleman and creating more direct contact between designer and client. Many of the industry’s producers have used this year to invest in new production techniques and to restructure.
    The design market has previously been focusing a lot on fairs and with this year we see many companies reconsidering their marketing and sales strategies away from big launch events a few times a year and doing business in a more direct and personal way.

    Maria Warner WongCo-founder, WOW Architects, Singapore
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    The pandemic has triggered a series of changes in the world that have revealed the lack of sustainability in design and architecture – unused office space, inadequate home workplaces, insufficient jobs, empty public venues.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    In the long term, the undeniable wastefulness and damage to society inherent in the paradox of endless growth will be exposed and inescapable. Architects & designers will have to develop better ways of building and providing for communities or be exposed to complicity in global warming.
    What have you learnt?
    I have realised that we cannot leave it to “someday”, the future is now. We should spend more time in nature to heal our sad & cynical soul.

    Sarah WigglesworthFounder, Sarah Wigglesworth Architects, London
    How has the pandemic impacted architecture and design?
    It has made us value space and air. Hopefully, it has reorientated our focus on the fact that buildings are about people. They are not just inhabited sculptures and brand identities. They really have to respond to need.
    What will the long-term impact be?
    What I’d like to see happen and what may happen are two different things. I’d like to see more people striving for better fitness & health by making better food choices and using self-propelled transit through cities (walking, boarding, cycling). That would free public transport to be safer as pressure on it would reduce.
    What might easily happen is that people resort to their cars because they represent a bubble but this would only increase congestion and potentially increase air pollution. The right to roam throughout the UK should be a given as people need to escape, but I suspect this won’t happen.
    Homes need to be much more flexible and larger to accommodate the various tasks they will have to perform as we work in different modes, places and times. Monocultural buildings such as offices could become redundant. Again, with the market in control, this is unlikely to happen.
    Planning-use classes ought to be re-thought as categories no longer seem appropriate (live/work might become a new one). Again, the planning reforms do not take this into account. I’d like the needs of communities to be much more embedded in the process of development.
    From Grenfell to pandemics, the economic-social-environmental equation needs to be reimagined I favour of humans and the ecology. Build back better? I hope so but let’s see the evidence!
    What have you learnt?
    Be kind. Every person has other responsibilities which should be understood as part of their life. The world will not fall apart if we recognise and work around them. Corona has been a great leveller.

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    Over 40 per cent of BAME interior designers have faced racial discrimination, survey finds

    Two out of five BAME interior designers have faced discrimination at work due to their ethnicity, according to a diversity survey by the British Institute of Interior Design.Conducted last year, BIID claims its Diversity in Interior Design survey is “the UK’s first-ever survey of diversity in interior design”.
    Forty-two per cent of the 109 respondents who identified as Asian, black, mixed or other said they had been a victim of discrimination in their profession or workplace because of their race or ethnicity.
    Just over 60 per cent also believe that their race or ethnicity has hindered their advancement in the industry.
    “It is clear that racism has been a factor that has held back the career progression of ethnic minority designers,” BIID chief operating office Katherine Elworthy told Dezeen.
    White designers disproportionately represented in senior positions
    The results found that 46 per cent of black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) interior designers are the only person of colour in their workplace.
    White designers, on the other hand, are disproportionally represented in leadership roles.
    Although they made up only 69 per cent of all 363 survey respondents, white designers accounted for 78 per cent of those in high-level positions.

    Fifteen per cent of all respondents have faced discrimination based on their ethnicity. This number increases to 42 per cent if only including responses from people who identify as Asian, black, mixed or other

    A total of 363 interior designers responded to the diversity survey. Overall, 37 per cent of respondents believed that they had been the victim of discrimination.
    Along with discrimination based on ethnicity the survey also identified that 18 per cent of designers believe they had been discriminated against because of their gender.
    The vast majority of these were women with 63 out of the 298 female respondents saying they had experienced discrimination.
    The survey also revealed that 10 per cent of respondents had been discriminated against because of their age.
    Issues start at university
    In addition to the survey, BIID analysed data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) on how different minority groups were represented among interior design students and recent graduates over the last five years.
    This showed that while interior design students are more likely to be from BAME backgrounds than the average UK student, a quarter of them end up having to take on low-skilled, non-industry jobs after university compared to 19 per cent of white students.

    Of all survey respondents who were in senior positions, 78 per cent were white
    This is a higher percentage than the average BAME student who studied a different subject, which BIID concluded: “suggests there may be particular difficulties for ethnic minorities who have interior design degrees”.
    “We also know from government statistics there is a correlation between being a member of some ethnic minority groups and being in the bottom income quintiles,” Elworthy explained.
    “If unpaid internships are still one of the routes into the profession then this, of course, may disadvantage designers who come from lower-income households.”
    HESA data further showed that there is an “attainment gap” at university, with only 13 per cent of BAME students receiving a first-class degree compared to 28 per cent of white students.
    Problem requires a “multi-faceted” solution
    “Whilst we are encouraged by high numbers of students choosing to study interior design, we need to explore how we can support the career progression of those students from ethnic minorities who may not be getting the opportunities to progress once qualified,” Elworthy concluded.
    “We feel that a multi-faceted approach is the best way forward. Our recently formed Diversity and Inclusion Committee is looking at how we can help support change within design practices, including recruitment, internships and opportunities for promotion,” she added.

    “Conversations about diversity need to expand to celebrate the work of people of colour”

    “We are also looking at how we can work with partners in the wider industry, such as universities, colleges, trade shows, awards schemes, suppliers and other industry initiatives to make sure our industry is diverse and inclusive.”
    The survey, which received responses both from BIID members and non-members, was conducted anonymously. “This does mean that we were unable to verify the identity of respondents,” BIID said.
    “We must also emphasise that given that this survey was entirely voluntary and based on a small self-selecting sample size, it cannot necessarily be used to extrapolate for the entire UK interior design profession.”
    In a separate effort to increase the diversity of the interior design sector, Sophie Ashby and Alexandria Dauley set up the United in Design initiative earlier this year.
    The project outlines seven concrete steps that interior design studios can take to improve their diversity.

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    Dezeen Awards 2021 is open for entries

    Dezeen Awards 2021 is now accepting entries! Enter before 31 March to take advantage of discounted early entry fees.Dezeen Awards is the most popular and accessible celebration of the world’s best architecture, interiors and design projects and studios.
    Enter before 31 March to save 20 per cent
    Standard entry prices remain unchanged for the fourth year in a row, making Dezeen Awards the most affordable and accessible awards programme in architecture and design.
    It costs just £100 per category for small companies and £200 for large companies to enter before the standard entry deadline on 2 June. But studios can save 20 per cent by entering before 31 March.
    Create an account or log in to start your entry ›
    Categories for architecture, interiors and design
    There are 36 categories this year: 10 each for architecture, interiors and design projects and two categories in each sector honouring the best established and emerging studios.
    Find out about the categories ›
    New sustainability categories
    This year we’re introducing sustainability categories for architecture, interiors and design. These three categories, sponsored by design platform Dodds & Shute, will celebrate projects that strive to reduce their impact on the earth and which make positive social and environmental contributions.
    About our judges
    Entries will be judged by a diverse panel of influential industry professionals, made up of 75 architects, designers, journalists and academics from all over the world.
    Past judges have included Norman Foster, who described Dezeen Awards as an “extraordinary endeavour”.
    Other 2020 judges included Paola Antonelli, Farshid Moussavi and Issa Diabaté.
    Keep your eyes peeled for our upcoming announcements about our 2021 judges.
    Why enter Dezeen Awards?
    Dezeen Awards is organised by Dezeen, the world’s most popular and influential architecture and design magazine, and judged by a panel consisting of leading figures from the architecture and design world. This means that Dezeen Awards has unprecedented credibility and reach.
    Every longlisted entry will be published on the Dezeen Awards website and will get prestigious Dezeen Awards 2021 badges to share on social media and their own websites.
    All shortlisted entries will be featured in full in an article on Dezeen and get further badges.
    Shortlisted entries will also be entered into the Dezeen Awards 2021 Public Vote, through which the public can choose their favourite projects and studios.
    Winners will receive a hand-made trophy and a certificate.

    Winners received a bespoke, handcrafted trophy designed by AtelierNL

    Past winners have described how winning a Dezeen Award has transformed their careers. “This is one of the few awards I have won that I can associate with new opportunities arising directly as a result of winning,” said Joe Doucet, winner of seating design of the year in 2019 with his anti-terrorism public bench.
    Last year’s Dezeen Awards attracted over 4,300 entries from 85 different countries, making it one of the largest and most international awards programmes in the industry.
    Dates and prices
    Once you have paid for your Dezeen Awards entry, you do not need to make any further payments. The awards will be announced online. If we are able to hold a physical awards ceremony there may be a charge, but attendance is not obligatory.
    Our low entry prices are designed to attract smaller studios and avoid categories being dominated by large companies that can afford to enter multiple categories.
    Find out about dates and prices ›
    Join our mailing list
    Subscribe to our mailing list to receive reminders about deadlines and regular information about Dezeen Awards including news of judges.
    Sign up now ›
    Questions?
    If you have any questions, please email awards@dezeen.com and someone from the team will get back to you.
    Good luck with your entries! More

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    New Dezeen Lookbooks section presents curated picks of home interiors from Dezeen's archive

    Dezeen has launched Dezeen Lookbooks, a new section featuring roundups of home interiors and decor trends to help designers and design lovers plan their projects.

    Published each Saturday, the visually driven Dezeen Lookbooks present roundups of images of contemporary interiors selected from our vast archive of over 750,000 images.
    Each roundup is curated by the Dezeen editorial team and addresses a different room and theme.

    Top: an image from our cosy living rooms lookbook. Above: a project from the peaceful bedrooms lookbook

    Lookbooks published so far feature living rooms, dining rooms, bedrooms, kitchens and bathrooms.
    Dezeen Lookbooks is a response to the surge of interest in home design since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, which has seen people spending much more time at home.
    As a result, web traffic to Dezeen posts about home interiors has soared.

    This Barcelona apartment features in our colourful kitchens lookbook
    Popular Lookbook stories we’ve published over the last few months include our showcases of living rooms with calm interiors, bold bathroom designs and thirty kitchens designed by architects.
    We’ll be adding more image-led roundups over the coming weeks and plan to expand the section to include other types of interiors plus trend reports in future.
    Interior design fans can also check out our sections on residential interiors, apartments and houses.

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