AJ Climate Champions cover art

AJ Climate Champions

By: Architects’ Journal
  • Summary

  • Brought to you by the Architects’ Journal. AJ sustainability editor Hattie Hartman and co-host Joe Jack Williams talk to changemakers and innovators who are transforming architecture by designing in ways that respect planetary boundaries. Show notes & more info here: https://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/podcasts
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Episodes
  • Vinu Daniel on transforming mud and waste into architecture
    May 8 2024

    Episode 51. AJ Climate Champions with Hattie Hartman and Joe Jack Williams.

    Daniel views mud and waste as opportunities, not obstacles. He advocates an approach of ‘maximum optimism’, explaining that mud and waste enhance his designs. ‘I follow the materials; they do not follow me,’ he says.

    Sourcing materials primarily from within five miles of a site, Daniel describes how mud and waste can be transformed into beautiful buildings. But this was not the case from the outset. Daniel first incorporated waste bottles into an early project because the budget ran out before the windows had been purchased. He then realised that a new aesthetic had emerged from this approach.

    Daniel argues that architects need to be on site, not in the office, in order to observe their surroundings. ‘Open your eyes. Be out there!’ he advises. Architecture is not a white collar job; it’s about going to site, according to Daniel. ‘Today architects are not able to see because we are simply oblivious to what is happening around us. This way of practice has to change,’ he insists.

    Daniel’s ambition is to bring earth construction to the mainstream and he is not opposed to adding small amounts of cement to his earth mixes to increase structural strength. ‘We need to enter commercial construction. If that means using a bit more steel or cement than the purest form of mud architecture, I’m open to it,’ he says.

    For show notes and to catch up on all AJ Climate Champions episodes, click here.

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    40 mins
  • Carmody Groarke’s Sian Ricketts on making bricks from waste
    Apr 24 2024

    Episode 50. AJ Climate Champions with Hattie Hartman and Joe Jack Williams.

    Carmody Groarke sustainability lead Sian Ricketts explains how architecture can adapt to the reality of finite resources and an abundance of waste.

    Ricketts says that architects should develop their intuition and new rules of thumb to design for a changing climate. Architecture needs to adapt to incorporate materials from waste streams, and this requires a new approach to detailing and ongoing maintenance. ‘The industry is going through a huge learning process and we should not be scared of getting it wrong,’ she says. Marginal gains on every project are important.

    In this episode, Ricketts describes the process of developing a bespoke brick for the Design Museum Gent in Belgium. She explains that the practice did not start with a bespoke brick in mind. Because conventional clay-fired bricks are high in embodied carbon, an exploration of less carbon intensive alternatives led to an in depth collaboration with Local Works Studio and Brussels-based bcmaterials that in turn led to incorporating local waste streams into the design of the new brick.

    Ricketts observes that the process of developing the bespoke brick for Ghent has strengthened the practice’s confidence in seeking opportunities for both innovation and circularity in future projects. Carmody Groarke is currently working with Imperial College-based startup Seratech to explore the use of magnesium carbonate as a binder for bricks.

    For show notes and to catch up on all AJ Climate Champions episodes, click here.

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    27 mins
  • AKTII’s David Watson on how to reduce the environmental impacts of brick
    Apr 10 2024

    Ep 49. Structural engineer David Watson describes the enduring appeal of brick and its underexploited superpower: reuse

    Brick has many advantages: durability, aesthetics, use as both envelope and structure, and the possibility of local (even artisanal) production. This last point differentiates it from steel and concrete, due to the Ordinary Portland Cement needed for concrete production. ‘We need to ‘build our intuition about what impacts embodied carbon and emissions from different materials,’ says Watson.

    Watson highlights the importance of querying the firing required to achieve different finishes, because it varies between brick types and can significantly impact overall embodied carbon. It’s also important to understand the fuel used in the kilns where bricks are fired. While in the UK this is predominantly natural gas, abroad it might be charcoal or coal, both of which generate significant amounts of particulates.

    In non-loadbearing cladding applications, the embodied carbon of the support systems must be taken into account because they can comprise as much embodied carbon as the brick and mortar combined. These hidden impacts are often difficult to calculate due to lack of EPD data, explains Watson.

    Brick reuse is on the increase but currently comprises less than five per cent of the market because of the challenge of removing the mortar, particularly those bound with Ordinary Portland Cement. Traditional lime-bound mortars are easier to remove. Current research is exploring mechanised removal of cement-bound mortars, and increased demand should prompt the market to respond, says Watson.

    In this episode, we also discuss ConcreteZero targets (AKTII is a signatory) and the extent to which they rely on GGBS. Watson stresses the necessity of ‘using less’, for example, exploring ribbed, coffered or troughed slabs as an alternative to flat slabs. He advocates form-effective design, marrying structure with architectural expression in a lean use of materials.

    David Watson can be contacted at david.watson@akt-uk.com.

    To catch up on all episodes of AJ Climate Champions, click here.

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    43 mins

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