Lecture by The Decorators, as part of Criss Cross Lectures.
The Decorators is a multidisciplinary design collective founded by Suzanne O’Connell, Xavi Llarch Font, Carolina Caicedo and Mariana Pestana.
Combining the disciplines of landscape architecture, interior architecture and psychology, The Decorators work on spatial design projects that aim to reconnect the physical elements of a place with its social dimension.
As a socially engaged practice they put conversation at the heart of their design process. Driven by the principle that people make places, they create spatial opportunities for social interaction. Through collaborative frameworks that involve many actors, The Decorators imagine alternative futures for everyday spaces.
Their clients include local authorities, housing developers, museums, curators and brands, and their work ranges from context specific community engagement strategies, public realm landscapes, exhibition design to interactive interiors.
Their work in public space is known for its creative approach to community engagement, driven by a concern for finding inclusive ways to create animated places in disconnected parts of a town or city. As a result they have developed a methodology that is about building on the social history and culture of a site to create new experiences that can prompt interaction or shape communal memory.
Amongst their public space projects, Ridley’s turned a derelict square in Ridley Road Market in London into an open kitchen that celebrated the produce of the market and its traders, Chrisp Street on Air developed a programme of events that brought the hidden culture of Chrisp Street out into the public and civic space of the market, Hackney Circle recruited nine local businesses and organisations in and around a public square in East London interested in working to make their businesses more welcoming to older residents.
Date and time | Thursday 9 March, 6.30pm |
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Location | Room CE1-16, Central House |
Contact | Charlotte Berman: bermanc@staff.londonmet.ac.uk |