Taking on challenging and tricky architectural sites

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Taking on challenging and tricky architectural sites

It is not always the structural itself that presents an architect with problems – very often it is the location of the project too.

A new exhibition, Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds, opens at the RIBA Architecture Gallery, in London, next month to look at some of these.

The displays explore some remarkable feats of architectural achievement in the face of tricky and uncompromising sites and locations across Britain.

Featuring works by some of history’s most renowned architects, including Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, Neave Brown, and Lord Norman Foster, alongside leading contemporary practices, this free exhibition showcases a spectrum of complex, unusual, and dynamic builds undertaken from 1900 to the present.

Spanning private homes, cultural sites, commercial centres, housing estates, and more, Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds looks at over 20 buildings that made unique use of design, layout, materials, and processes as a direct response to site constraints and limitations.

Distributed across three thematic sections – Difficult Landscapes, Difficult Urban Spaces, and Difficult Reworkings – the projects present an eye-opening and inspiring study into how resilient and creative practitioners realised the seemingly inconceivable.

Through models, drawings, photography, and plans, visitors will get insight into how these creative visions were brought into being against the odds.

Project highlights include:

Creek Vean House – a highly influential example of British modernism built into the steeply sloping banks of a Cornish river; the Weston Tower – the first structural addition to Westminster Abbey since 1745, with a rotated square motif inspired by the adjacent Henry VII Chapel and the Magna Science Adventure Centre – an early example of a redundant industrial site being skilfully transformed into a cultural destination.

RIBA President, Muyiwa Oki, said: “Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds celebrates the pioneering spirit that lies at the heart of great architecture.

“These projects and their architects push the boundaries of what architecture can achieve.

“As environments become more changeable and the needs of societies grow and evolve, navigating challenging sites will become ever more important for architects and clients.

“This exhibition offers fascinating and important case studies of exceptional creative vision and technical innovation, continuing RIBA’s legacy of championing architecture and its place in shaping the future.”

*Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds is at RIBA Architecture Gallery, 66 Portland Place, London, from October 11, 2024, to 29 March, 2025.

Photo: Magna Science Adventure Centre (2001). Rotherham, UK. Wilkinson Eyre Architects