Pavilions for Empowerment

Pavilions provide platforms for people to come together, to co-design and create opportunities to engage with a broader audience.

Bringing Home to the Unknown Pavilion (2021) by Architect: POoR CollectiveRoyal Institute of British Architects

Bringing Home to the Unknown, Regents Park, London. UK

Bringing Home to the Unknown was a temporary installation in Regent’s Park designed by architecture collective, POoR and students from Mayesbrook Park School, Becontree. Commissioned and created as part of the cultural programme to mark the centenary of the Becontree Estate. 

Bringing Home to the Unknown Pavilion (2021) by Architect: POoR CollectiveRoyal Institute of British Architects

Over six weeks in 2021, POoR Collective worked with Year 10 students from Mayesbrook Park School, an alternative provision school for young people in Barking and Dagenham, London as part of the RIBA Architecture Ambassadors Programme.

Bringing Home to the Unknown Pavilion (2021) by Architect: POoR CollectiveRoyal Institute of British Architects

The POoR Collective, which stands for Power Out Of Restriction, focuses on the development of communities through the elevation of young people. They believe in the power of community and aim to help those who are often under-represented, facilitating collaborative projects that enable creative and co-designed projects.

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

People's Pavilion, 2021, London, UK

The People’s Pavilion demonstrated a bold approach to co-design. It was a collaborative project, initiated by Beyond The Box Consultants CIC and Urban Symbiotics, who collectively engaged 150 young East Londoners to design a space solely by the creation of young people. 

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

The multi-disciplinary project gave the opportunity for the young people to work in partnership with professionals from the built environment and creative arts industries to design and build a temporary pavilion, and produce a ten day festival. 

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

The collaborative project was a community effort from the start. The 150 young East London residents took part in a series of design, engineering and placemaking workshops led by a collaborative research project - Re-Fabricate and architectural design workshop - Scale Rule along with architecture students. Competing teams came together to further shape their ideas by completing a design development week with research led multi-disciplinary design, architecture Urban Symbiotics and Beyond The Box.

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

The Festival

Running in parallel with the design competition was the young cultural producers programme. Working with a team of ten cultural producers from across East London, together the residents programmed a ten day festival that was hosted at The People’s Pavilion. 

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

The festival collaborated with a range of cultural and creative partners, including the V&A Museum and artist Brendan Barry, and with the Lund Point photographic exhibition.  

The pavilion provided a venue for debate and dialogue: panel talks took place with Resolve Collective, Urban Symbiotics and PoOr Collective, and a LGBT inclusive day was held with special guests Lady Phyll (Founder of UK Black Pride), legendary model and activist Winn Austin, artist BamBam, Stonewall Housing advocate Joshua Asare, and there was a special screening of the short film ‘There’s always a black issue dear’.

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

The pavilion provided a dynamic programme, including a series of live performances and immersive DJ sets - among them a session with Space Black with projected archival images from the Black Cultural Archives.

The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion (2021)Royal Institute of British Architects

“From a few rough sketches on a page, to a tangible model, and now into reality; we are so honoured to have the opportunity to showcase our design. To have our voices heard as young people from Tower Hamlets has given us a sense of belonging and inclusiveness. The People’s Pavilion project has given us an insight into the world of architecture, and we are so looking forward to the next steps of our architectural journey.”

Team Reverie:  Shahriyar Ahmed (18), Samira Elbahja (17) and Dellilah Jamal (17) 

Proud Little Pyramid (2021) by Architect: Adam Nathaniel Furman and Photographer: John SturrockRoyal Institute of British Architects

Proud Little Pyramid, London, UK

Proud Little Pyramid brought camp, colour and creativity to the area of King’s Cross in London as part of a residency during the summer of 2021. The purpose of the structure was to bring greater visibility within urban spaces for the queer and the marginal.   

Proud Little Pyramid (2021) by Architect: Adam Nathaniel Furman and Photographer: John SturrockRoyal Institute of British Architects

Artist and designer Adam Nathaniel Furman used the recycled structure of the giant King’s Cross Christmas tree, to create a monumental ‘anti-monument’. The shape and decoration embodies urban grandiosity and references the architectural history of King’s Cross, as well as its history of being a place of free expression, kinship and pleasure – from the Panarmonion Pleasure Gardens in the early 19th Century to its central place in the history of Queer London from the 80s until the early 2000s.

Serpentine Pavilion 2021

The annual commission for the summertime pavilion adjacent to the Serpentine Gallery in Hyde Park, London, was in 2021 designed and created by Sumayya Vally, the director of Counterspace - a practice from Johannesburg, South Africa. Hear her aspirations for the pavilion to be more than a temporary structure and space within the park but to represent and express stories of place and migration.

Credits: Story

Explore more from RIBA Collections here. 
All images are from RIBA Collections unless listed.    

With courtesy of Neil Onion from Beyond the Box for the photographs of the People's Pavilion

Adam Nathaniel Furman for the images of Proud Little Pyramid

Serpentine Gallery for the film on Serpentine Pavilion 2021

Images: 
The Reverie, winning design for the People's Pavilion. Image rights: Luke O'Donovan 
The Reverie, People's Pavilion workshop images:  Rights: Toby Merritt 
Proud Little Pyramid, King's Cross, London. Image rights: John Sturrock


Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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