The Bartlett
Summer Show 2023
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X-Ray: The Embodied City, Corner Sites

Project details

Programme
Year 1

This year, for the building project, the brief asked us to investigate how buildings can be designed to nurture health and wellbeing. Health and wellbeing should be considered something that incorporates both animate and inanimate, medical and non-medical elements and forms of architecture. This is explored through both conventional and alternative practices, encompassing the mystical, profane and spiritual elements of buildings, as both sick and healthy constructions. We can relate health to active and non-active practices of the body, including the foods we grow and eat, the quality of air and the particles we breathe and the flora and fauna surrounding us.


We stepped into the shoes of the architect-surgeon, as we learnt to diagnose the city, our sites and their surrounding environments, while we dreamed about alternative realities, envisioning what a site can host or become in order to help the occupants and the wider city. The project worked on three scales: one-to-one actions and occupations for the body; the building as body; and the building within the embodied city.


The projects below chose corner sites.

Students

Karina Lacraru, Kinematic Performance Centre

The project is an interactive performance space that engulfs the external audience in a fluid environment. The building presents a timber atrium that offers a double invitation: to be a spectator or a practitioner.

Yuhan Wu, Water Therapy Clinic

Utilising the concept of water therapy as a foundation, this project endeavours to push the boundaries of spatial and bodily experience. It constitutes a speculative exploration that delves into the realm of imagination.

Bonnie Irvine, Seed Production and Exchange

Tianyi (Thomas) Bao, Heroin Ward

This project proposes seeks to combat drug issues in the city through the creation of a space for heroin users, rehabilitation patients and the public.

Brant You, Botanical Recovery Centre

This project proposes a botanical recovery centre, a place for local residents to undergo arm recovery through planting. The plants are planted by patients and then placed in grids that form part of the wall.

Chau Tran, The Rhythm Retreat: Harmonising Architecture

Highlighting the intricate relationship between mind and soul, the external world of sound shapes our emotional and bodily experience. The project allows visitors to immerse in the experiences of listening, recording, and performing sound.

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The Bartlett
Summer Show 2023
23 June – 8 July 2023
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