There is a growing consensus that professional work faces an uncertain future. However, debates have tended to take a macro focus, underplaying the role of individuals’ accounts of their working lives. In this article we focus on UK architecture, examining how public-sector and private-sector architects construct the purpose and process of their occupation, applying the concept of discourse to explore and explicate the different versions expressed in individuals’ accounts.We argue that architecture is constituted in the modes of creative endeavour, business activity and public service.The discourses that are mobilized, and the occasions of their production, reflect architects’ orientations to the diverse challenges facing their profession, ...
For most architects, architecture is not only art, craft, passion and engagement; it is their ‘bread...
Architecture and bureaucracy: indissociable and irreconcilable? The two spheres are often seen in op...
social fields “[…] the clever cook puts unlikely things together, like duck and orange, like pineapp...
This essay is an invited contribution to a collection from the Royal Institute of British Architects...
The word and title ‘architect’ has become a semantic and professional myth. As a label it has become...
Today's professional field of architecture is characterised by rapid transformation. This heavily af...
We understand the industries of architecture as specific, yet polyvalent, historically contingent, a...
Those entering the architectural profession tend to be motivated by a desire to undertake creative d...
This thesis builds on existing research which examines the impact of architectural culture and the c...
This article investigates the word ‘agency’ in relation to the role, responsibility and power of the...
commercial organizations in which architects work and, crucially, in which they learn. The Royal Ins...
Following architects at work from within the architecture firm allows to describe architecture in th...
92 pagesAbstractIn contemporary architectural discourse, new terms and concepts from different disci...
Abstract The construction industry is characterised by ever-changing projects that constantly involv...
Purpose - Those entering the architectural profession tend to be motivated by a desire to undertake ...
For most architects, architecture is not only art, craft, passion and engagement; it is their ‘bread...
Architecture and bureaucracy: indissociable and irreconcilable? The two spheres are often seen in op...
social fields “[…] the clever cook puts unlikely things together, like duck and orange, like pineapp...
This essay is an invited contribution to a collection from the Royal Institute of British Architects...
The word and title ‘architect’ has become a semantic and professional myth. As a label it has become...
Today's professional field of architecture is characterised by rapid transformation. This heavily af...
We understand the industries of architecture as specific, yet polyvalent, historically contingent, a...
Those entering the architectural profession tend to be motivated by a desire to undertake creative d...
This thesis builds on existing research which examines the impact of architectural culture and the c...
This article investigates the word ‘agency’ in relation to the role, responsibility and power of the...
commercial organizations in which architects work and, crucially, in which they learn. The Royal Ins...
Following architects at work from within the architecture firm allows to describe architecture in th...
92 pagesAbstractIn contemporary architectural discourse, new terms and concepts from different disci...
Abstract The construction industry is characterised by ever-changing projects that constantly involv...
Purpose - Those entering the architectural profession tend to be motivated by a desire to undertake ...
For most architects, architecture is not only art, craft, passion and engagement; it is their ‘bread...
Architecture and bureaucracy: indissociable and irreconcilable? The two spheres are often seen in op...
social fields “[…] the clever cook puts unlikely things together, like duck and orange, like pineapp...