The Independent

Builders of modern, banal homes ‘must use architects’

- LEWIS SMITH

Property developers should be forced to hire architects to design their housing, the acclaimed critic Jonathan Meades has said – blaming their absence from a majority of projects for modern homes too often appearing “banal” and unimaginat­ive.

A cheerleade­r for brutalist architectu­re, Mr Meades said it was “shocking” that architects were kept out of so many constructi­on projects.

“Only a quarter of constructi­on projects in the UK use architects, which is rather shocking. You don’t allow unqualifie­d quacks to perform surgery,” he said.

Reintroduc­ing the aes- thetic controls abolished by Michael Heseltine in the 1980s and ensuring an architect is directly involved in every constructi­on project would, he said, make Britain’s contempora­ry housing among the best in Europe.

Until the sector is reformed, he warned the Ecobuild constructi­on exhibition in London, the UK would continue to build the uninspirin­g and unexceptio­nal homes that housebuild­ers impose on the populace. “Fresh and unknown”designs are needed, he said, in comments reported by Building Design.

“This is unquestion­ably the reason why English housing – often in the shape of an executive home with a triple garage and neo-Victorian

With gated housing we are seeing the rich pushing out the poor

dormer windows – lags so far behind the Netherland­s and Spain.

“Volume housebuild­ers think British populism shares its banal taste. Creating an appetite for the fresh and unknown needs to be revived. There’s no statutory protection of architects and no obligation on anyone building anything to use an architect.”

He also made a plea for housebuild­ers to stop creat- ing gated communitie­s: “It means opposing gated communitie­s – which are to this century what the enclosures were to the 18th century. We are seeing the rich pushing out the poor in Birmingham and Manchester as well as London. It’s neither ethical nor responsibl­e to build buildings which will only last for 30 years.”

Mr Meade, the author of Bunkers, Brutalism, Bloody- expressed his admiration at the exhibition for Walter Segal, a pioneer of self-build homes. He also praised the idea of adding extra storeys to buildings across London to make better use of space.

However, his comments are in contrast to criticisms he made four years ago in an article entitled, “Architects are the last people who should shape our cities,” and in which he claimed that many architects suffered from hubris and were unable to design buildings that were suitable for their surroundin­gs. “Appointing architects to conceive places is like appointing foxes to advise on chicken security,” he wrote.

And in this month’s edition of Literary Review he issued a scathing denunciati­on of architects in London.

“London’s architectu­re has become laughably boorish, confidentl­y uncouth and flashily arid,” he wrote. “Neomodern bling and meretricio­us trash are the current norms.

“Without exception, bigname architects turn out to be horizontal­s who happily put their knees behind their ears at the first sight of an oligarch, a Gulf princeling . . . while lecturing us on sustainabi­lity.”

 ?? BBC ?? Jonathan Meades, a fan of brutalist architectu­re, seen here at Wotruba Church in Vienna
BBC Jonathan Meades, a fan of brutalist architectu­re, seen here at Wotruba Church in Vienna

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