image, One Portwall Square, Rob Parrish

This time last year we were looking forward to 2022 as a time to take stock and rebuild after two years of working together through a global health crisis, but once again the past 12 months have seen the world around us shaken by events outside our control, including of course the war in Ukraine, as well as political and economic upheaval in the UK and further afield.

In that context some might say that the benefits of gradually returning to work together in person fade into insignificance, but if anything these global and national crises mean that it has mattered all the more to see our teams and our wider collaborators gather again to work together and to support and learn from one another, whether in our offices; at our Spring Conference in King’s Place; through our Research Trip to Bristol; to practice events like our programme to celebrate Black History Month.

Of course, the reason we come together at all is to make architecture with our clients and collaborators and our 2022 Review of the Year celebrates a year that’s been busy at all stages of the process, from new commissions, through successful planning approvals, from progress on site to completion and, eventually, to seeing those buildings in occupation.

Architecture is often a long game, and so we are especially delighted to see the completion of one of our longest-standing and most complex projects. Soho Place, first worked on in 2006 and evolving throughout the halting momentum of Crossrail, makes a three-part contribution to the city in the form of a new West End theatre (the first in 50 years), an office and retail building at No. 1 Oxford Street and, connecting the pair, a new public space which opens up, for the first time, a direct thoroughfare between Charing Cross Road and Soho Square. 

The year also saw the completion of One Portwall Square in Bristol, the transformation of an overlooked brownfield site just a few minutes’ walk from Bristol Temple Meads. The building sets a new standard for office space in the city while adding a newly created public square to ‘Brunel’s Mile’. It will shortly become our Bristol studio’s new home, a full fifteen years after AHMM first established its presence there. 

Finally, one of our most important projects to complete this year is not a building, but the publication of Delivering Net Zero in Use: a guide for architects. Resulting from a two-year Knowledge Transfer Partnership between AHMM and UCL, this guidance grounds the empirical process of designing buildings within the existential context of the climate crisis. The guide is intended as a real-world tool for practice, whose success will only benefit from ongoing critical review, including through feedback from you, our friends and collaborators.

 

Completed projects

This year has seen twenty projects complete in London, Bristol, Edinburgh and Oklahoma, among them a town hall, two school projects, a tiki bar and the first new build theatre in London’s West End for 50 years. In October, @sohoplace theatre opened, the first part of a three-act plan that also includes a public space and an office and retail building that sits over the Tottenham Court Road station exit. Opening earlier in the year was AHMM’s fourth pro-bono project, the pastel pink Future Dreams House, a dedicated breast cancer support centre. Another pink building to complete this year was Flamingo Tiki, a new bar in the Paseo arts community of Oklahoma City. This year also saw the completion of One Portwall Square which will become AHMM Bristol’s home at the start of the new year.

 

Awards

This year three projects received RIBA London awards: Hawley Wharf, Breakers Place and The Post Building, with Hawley Wharf going on to win a RIBA National Award in June.

Two projects picked up British Homes Awards: Wimbledon House, a private home in south London won the House of the Year (over 2500 sq ft) category, and The Vincent in Bristol won the Later Living/Supported Living Design of the Year.

Outside London, in Salford, Two New Bailey Square won the BCO North Award for Commercial Workspace while in Liverpool, the Alder Centre for Child Bereavement won three awards including an AIA UK Chapter Excellence in Design Award; and two Building Better Healthcare awards including Best Interior Design Project (New Build) and Best Healthcare Development (UK - under £10m).

Meanwhile projects in and around Oklahoma City won a total of seven AIA awards and citations across a range of categories.

 

Planning

Among twenty projects being granted planning approval this year, five involve the retention and reinvention of existing buildings to become new workplaces including Boland’s Bakery in Dublin; the Bristol Evening Post’s former production facility at One Temple Way; a 1980s office building on a prominent corner site in Islington; and the West One Shopping Centre on Oxford Street.

Further west, working directly with Cardiff and Bristol City Councils, consent was granted for the latest in a series of community living and affordable housing projects in those two cities, while in London consents included those working in partnership with homeless charity St Mungo’s at 217 Harrow Road and with Women’s Pioneer Housing at 227 Wood Lane. Meanwhile, in the US, consent was gained for The Citizen, a mixed-use building on a sensitive site overlooking the Oklahoma City National Memorial.

 

Work in Progress

In July AHMM’s first project in India started on site when Google India broke ground in the south Indian capital city of Hyderabad, while our first project in Los Angeles, an office fit-out for video game developer Treyarch, also got underway.

Assembly Building A, British Telecom’s new home in Bristol, reached practical completion, while Buildings B and C reached their highest point, a milestone marked with a topping out ceremony in September. 

In London, work began at 242 Marylebone Road, a project that will extend and refurbish a nine-storey building in the City of Westminster, while further east at Kings Cross, work began at Belgrove House. This specialised laboratory and office building for the life-sciences sector will be occupied by MSD as a UK Discovery Research Centre and HQ. Bricks salvaged from the existing building during its demolition will be refurbished and reused at the neighbouring Acorn House which is due to start on site in the new year.

 

Practice and Culture

2022 saw the practice returning to the office in greater numbers and allowed us to re-establish our annual calendar of cultural events. For the first time in two years, we were able to hold our annual conference in person, with the London, Bristol and Madrid offices coming together at Kings Place in London.

We were also able to take our first research trip since 2019, when the practice visited Bristol in September. The research trip is an opportunity for the practice to visit a new city or to see a familiar one in a new light, and to tour buildings designed by the practice both built and under construction. 2022 also marked fifteen years of the practice working in the city, and the completion of its new Bristol studio space.

For the second year AHMM, in collaboration with the Architecture Foundation, awarded ten young practitioners a six-month residency at our White Collar Factory office. The new residents are the directors of practices Studio naama, Studio NYALI, Entropic Group and Studio KA, as well as the directors of the campaign group Black Females in Architecture, one of whom is also employed as an architect by the practice.

 

Sustainability

In the autumn we launched Delivering Net Zero in Use: a guide for architects. This guidance is a key output from the collaborative Knowledge Transfer Partnership between AHMM and UCL’s Bartlett Institute for Environmental Design and Engineering; the KTP has been a two-year programme researching the opportunities and implications of developing net zero carbon large scale, mixed use, urban, commercially driven and densely occupied buildings.

Our Sustainability and Building Performance team continues to grow to reflect the increasing focus among our clients on the climate emergency and our shared responsibility for addressing this within our collaborations. We aim to carry out a lifecycle analysis of all of our projects throughout 2023.

This year we also published our Zero Carbon Plan report outlining AHMM’s approach to a carbon reduction commitment to achieve Net Zero Emissions by 2050. This is line with our commitment to the Science Based Targets initiative, committing us to doing what science dictates is necessary to reduce the destructive impacts of climate change on human society and nature: to reach net-zero global emissions by 2050 at the latest in order to limit global warming to 1.5°C.

 

Fifthman

Now into its seventh year, FifthMan, AHMM’s in-house publishing project released two more building studies during 2022: a minigraph (020) looking at the evolution of a ten-year project to reconfigure the University of Amsterdam’s city-centre campus, and a daybook (028) to chart the reinvention of The Post Building in central London. Both are available to buy from the FifthMan website along with other titles from our back catalogue.

In September we popped up during the London Open House Festival at 1 Finsbury Avenue, transforming Studio Myerscough’s Atoll into a bookshop with our friends from The Modernist, Canalside Press and RIBA Publishing.

We’re now putting the finishing touches to Works, a detailed monograph (030) that presents more than three decades of AHMM projects, structured by the ideas that guided our very first monograph, Manual, and sandwiched with investigations into cross-practice themes of sustainability, longevity and composition.

 

Partnerships

Our Partnerships work continued to engage with our communities – local, global and architectural - through donations, fundraising and volunteering throughout the year. As well as donating to education and climate crisis charities, we offered support to humanitarian emergency relief including floods in Pakistan, the war in Ukraine and Amnesty International Iran appeal; and also to charities helping to alleviate the cost of living crisis. The practice undertook collective fundraising activities to support our Charities of the Year, Accumulate - the Art School for the Homeless in London and Help Bristol's Homeless. Over 2021/22 we donated £236,621 to 148 good causes and our staff team undertook 2,128 hours of volunteering.

 

Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

In response to recommendations from AHMM’s ED&I group, this year the practice appointed its first Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Lead. The role will be responsible for the development and delivery of a range of recommendations from the practice’s existing working groups.

In June Rochelle Dalphinis was appointed ED&I Lead, a year long, full time secondment. It is hoped that this role will also develop external networks to maintain and share up-to-date knowledge, gain an understanding of best practices being applied elsewhere, and champion their application within the business.


 

Completed projects

This year has seen twenty projects complete in London, Bristol, Edinburgh and Oklahoma, among them a town hall, two school projects, a tiki bar and the first new build theatre in London’s West End for 50 years. In October, @sohoplace theatre opened, the first part of a three-act plan that also includes a public space and an office and retail building that sits over the Tottenham Court Road station exit. Opening earlier in the year was AHMM’s fourth pro-bono project, the pastel pink Future Dreams House, a dedicated breast cancer support centre. Another pink building to complete this year was Flamingo Tiki, a new bar in the Paseo arts community of Oklahoma City. This year also saw the completion of One Portwall Square which will become AHMM Bristol’s home at the start of the new year.

FUTURE DREAMS HOUSE

FUTURE DREAMS HOUSE

This year saw the completion of Future Dreams House, a new home for the Breast Cancer Haven charity in partnership with Future Dreams. The townhouse at 61 Birkenhead Street in Kings Cross has been stripped back and refurbished to create therapy rooms, consultation rooms, a communal kitchen and administration spaces.

Woodward Pizza

Woodward Pizza

Woodward Pizza opened in the spring in the new Icehouse development in Edmond, Oklahoma, selling Detroit style pizza. The fit-out designed by AHMM’s OKC team includes a wraparound bar and various seating types with an industrial aesthetic, as well as a family friendly patio.

Fried Taco

Fried Taco

Also located in Edmond, Oklahoma’s Icehouse development, and with a fit-out designed by AHMM, the Fried Taco opened in the spring and quickly became a popular place for tacos with toppings as bright as the vibrant interiors.

 

Awards

This year three projects received RIBA London awards: Hawley Wharf, Breakers Place and The Post Building, with Hawley Wharf going on to win a RIBA National Award in June.

Two projects picked up British Homes Awards: Wimbledon House, a private home in south London won the House of the Year (over 2500 sq ft) category, and The Vincent in Bristol won the Later Living/Supported Living Design of the Year.

Outside London, in Salford, Two New Bailey Square won the BCO North Award for Commercial Workspace while in Liverpool, the Alder Centre for Child Bereavement won three awards including an AIA UK Chapter Excellence in Design Award; and two Building Better Healthcare awards including Best Interior Design Project (New Build) and Best Healthcare Development (UK - under £10m).

Meanwhile projects in and around Oklahoma City won a total of seven AIA awards and citations across a range of categories.

 

Planning

Among twenty projects being granted planning approval this year, five involve the retention and reinvention of existing buildings to become new workplaces including Boland’s Bakery in Dublin; the Bristol Evening Post’s former production facility at One Temple Way; a 1980s office building on a prominent corner site in Islington; and the West One Shopping Centre on Oxford Street.

Further west, working directly with Cardiff and Bristol City Councils, consent was granted for the latest in a series of community living and affordable housing projects in those two cities, while in London consents included those working in partnership with homeless charity St Mungo’s at 217 Harrow Road and with Women’s Pioneer Housing at 227 Wood Lane. Meanwhile, in the US, consent was gained for The Citizen, a mixed-use building on a sensitive site overlooking the Oklahoma City National Memorial.

Canada Water zone F

Canada Water zone F

In July the London borough of Southwark voted to grant planning approval for the construction of two residential towers and an office building, located at the centre of British Land’s Canada Water Masterplan.

BOLAND’S BAKERY

BOLAND’S BAKERY

In February, Dublin City Council granted planning permission for Boland’s Bakery, a new office for Google in the Irish capital. On completion the new workspace will accommodate 1,100 employees across around 170,000sqft of floor space, and benefit from a rooftop garden and outdoor terraces.

Lisson Grove

Lisson Grove

In November Westminster Council’s planning committee voted unanimously to approve AHMM’s proposals for the redevelopment of the site at 26-46 Lisson Grove in west London.

227 Wood Lane

227 Wood Lane

In November Hammersmith and Fulham planning committee granted planning permission for 227 Wood Lane, a residential building for Women’s Pioneer Housing, a suffragist organisation founded in 1920.

Botanic House Hills Road

Botanic House Hills Road

In March Botanic House on Hills Road in Cambridge was successful at planning appeal and received planning permission. The campus of four distinct but related buildings, two existing and two new, is committed to achieving BREEAM Outstanding and WELL Platinum.

217 HARROW ROAD

217 HARROW ROAD

In September 217 Harrow Road was granted planning consent by Westminster Council. The scheme includes a purpose-built facility for homeless charity St Mungo’s and a mixed tenure residential tower.

royal street

royal street

In December the London borough of Lambeth voted unanimously to award planning consent for the Royal Street masterplan. The mixed use scheme includes new workplaces, life science buildings and 133 new homes. AHMM led the masterplan and worked on the building design alongside Cobe, Morris and Co, Feilden Fowles, Henley Halebrown and Pearcy & Co. The team, supported by an extensive team of specialist consultants, have been working on the proposals since late 2019.

Blackhorse lane

Blackhorse lane

In December Waltham Forest’s planning committee unanimously voted to grant permission for Blackhorse Lane, a residential led scheme that includes a new cultural venue, café, bar and events space in Walthamstow, north east London.

keith house

keith house

In April Keith House Eastern Site was unanimously approved by the Hillingdon Planning Committee. The Eastern Site scheme forms the second part of a masterplan proposal for the wider Keith House site, following the success of the Keith House Western Site, which received planning permission 2021.

KINGSWEAR ROAD

KINGSWEAR ROAD

In March planning permission was granted for Kingswear Road, a residential development in the Knowle area of south Bristol. The scheme will create 34 affordable homes, with the tenure split between social rent and shared ownership.

 

Work in Progress

In July AHMM’s first project in India started on site when Google India broke ground in the south Indian capital city of Hyderabad, while our first project in Los Angeles, an office fit-out for video game developer Treyarch, also got underway.

Assembly Building A, British Telecom’s new home in Bristol, reached practical completion, while Buildings B and C reached their highest point, a milestone marked with a topping out ceremony in September. 

In London, work began at 242 Marylebone Road, a project that will extend and refurbish a nine-storey building in the City of Westminster, while further east at Kings Cross, work began at Belgrove House. This specialised laboratory and office building for the life-sciences sector will be occupied by MSD as a UK Discovery Research Centre and HQ. Bricks salvaged from the existing building during its demolition will be refurbished and reused at the neighbouring Acorn House which is due to start on site in the new year.

242 Marylebone

242 Marylebone

In March work began on site at 242 Marylebone, a project that extends and refurbishes the nine storey Woolworth House in the Dorset Square Conservation Area in the City of Westminster.

Ferry Island

Ferry Island

Works have begun at Ferry Island the third phase of the ‘Heart of Hale’, Argent Related’s scheme in Tottenham Hale, north London.

1 Keskidee Square

1 Keskidee Square

In May this year 1 Keskidee Square topped out. The nine-storey mixed use building fulfils an important civic role on the site due to its prominence on two key new public realm spaces, Keskidee and Chilton Squares. Drone photo courtesy of TJ Franklin of BAM.

Deptford Landings Plot 5

Deptford Landings Plot 5

In November Deptford Landings Plot 5 started on site. The five-building plot in south east London will on completion create 405 new homes, 382 student rooms, 3,874 square metres of workspace and 622 square metres of retail space, with a new linear park and access ways connecting the existing open spaces.

 

Practice and Culture

2022 saw the practice returning to the office in greater numbers and allowed us to re-establish our annual calendar of cultural events. For the first time in two years, we were able to hold our annual conference in person, with the London, Bristol and Madrid offices coming together at Kings Place in London.

We were also able to take our first research trip since 2019, when the practice visited Bristol in September. The research trip is an opportunity for the practice to visit a new city or to see a familiar one in a new light, and to tour buildings designed by the practice both built and under construction. 2022 also marked fifteen years of the practice working in the city, and the completion of its new Bristol studio space.

For the second year AHMM, in collaboration with the Architecture Foundation, awarded ten young practitioners a six-month residency at our White Collar Factory office. The new residents are the directors of practices Studio naama, Studio NYALI, Entropic Group and Studio KA, as well as the directors of the campaign group Black Females in Architecture, one of whom is also employed as an architect by the practice.

Spring Conference

Spring Conference

In May, after a break of two years, we were able to hold our spring conference with a particular focus on carbon. We were joined by Hattie Hartman, author, architect and Sustainability Editor at the Architects’ Journal; Patrick Bellew, founding director of Atelier Ten; and Richard Thompson, a director of Parabola, our client at Edinburgh Park.

OPEN HOUSE LONDON 2022

OPEN HOUSE LONDON 2022

As part of this year’s programme three AHMM projects were opened to the public. AHMM led tours of the EH Smith Clerkenwell design centre, 1 Finsbury Avenue, and White Collar Factory. We also opened a pop-up bookshop at 1 Finsbury Avenue, teaming up with the Modernist bookshop, the Architecture Foundation, Canalside Press, RIBA Books and AHMM’s own FifthMan imprint.

PAUL MONAGHAN CHAIRS THE DAVIDSON PRIZE JUDGING PANEL

PAUL MONAGHAN CHAIRS THE DAVIDSON PRIZE JUDGING PANEL

In May Paul Monaghan chaired the judging panel for this year’s Davidson Prize. The award was launched in 2020 by the Alan Davidson Foundation and aims to celebrate the transformative architecture of the home.

WADE SCARAMUCCI JOINS OKLAHOMA BOARD

WADE SCARAMUCCI JOINS OKLAHOMA BOARD

In March Director Wade Scaramucci was appointed to the Board of Governors of the Licensed Architects, Landscape Architects and Registered Commercial Interior Designers of Oklahoma.

PAUL MONAGHAN APPOINTED AS MAYOR’S DESIGN ADVOCATE

PAUL MONAGHAN APPOINTED AS MAYOR’S DESIGN ADVOCATE

In May Paul Monaghan was announced as one of the 42 Mayor’s Design Advocates. The new cohort of advocates, appointed by The Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, is a group of independent built environment professionals chosen for their skills and experience to provide advice and expertise on London’s built environment.

Annual Research Trip

Annual Research Trip

In September, for the first time since 2019, the offices of AHMM were able to come together for their annual Research Trip. The event is an opportunity for the practice to make a visit to a city together – invigorating our work and helping to develop our personal and collective practice.

 

Sustainability

In the autumn we launched Delivering Net Zero in Use: a guide for architects. This guidance is a key output from the collaborative Knowledge Transfer Partnership between AHMM and UCL’s Bartlett Institute for Environmental Design and Engineering; the KTP has been a two-year programme researching the opportunities and implications of developing net zero carbon large scale, mixed use, urban, commercially driven and densely occupied buildings.

Our Sustainability and Building Performance team continues to grow to reflect the increasing focus among our clients on the climate emergency and our shared responsibility for addressing this within our collaborations. We aim to carry out a lifecycle analysis of all of our projects throughout 2023.

This year we also published our Zero Carbon Plan report outlining AHMM’s approach to a carbon reduction commitment to achieve Net Zero Emissions by 2050. This is line with our commitment to the Science Based Targets initiative, committing us to doing what science dictates is necessary to reduce the destructive impacts of climate change on human society and nature: to reach net-zero global emissions by 2050 at the latest in order to limit global warming to 1.5°C.

PhD Studentship

PhD Studentship

In partnership with UCL’s Energy Institute, AHMM is supporting a four year PhD studentship to investigate Smart Buildings Design and Digital Engineering. The PhD project aims to develop a decision-making framework for integration of smart readiness indices in the early architectural design process while endorsing energy design hierarchy. Case studies of real building designs will be used to develop and ground the method, and the candidate will be supervised by Dr Craig Robertson along with UCL’s Professor Dejan Mumovic and Dr Esfand Burman.

 

Fifthman

Now into its seventh year, FifthMan, AHMM’s in-house publishing project released two more building studies during 2022: a minigraph (020) looking at the evolution of a ten-year project to reconfigure the University of Amsterdam’s city-centre campus, and a daybook (028) to chart the reinvention of The Post Building in central London. Both are available to buy from the FifthMan website along with other titles from our back catalogue.

In September we popped up during the London Open House Festival at 1 Finsbury Avenue, transforming Studio Myerscough’s Atoll into a bookshop with our friends from The Modernist, Canalside Press and RIBA Publishing.

We’re now putting the finishing touches to Works, a detailed monograph (030) that presents more than three decades of AHMM projects, structured by the ideas that guided our very first monograph, Manual, and sandwiched with investigations into cross-practice themes of sustainability, longevity and composition.

 

Partnerships

Our Partnerships work continued to engage with our communities – local, global and architectural - through donations, fundraising and volunteering throughout the year. As well as donating to education and climate crisis charities, we offered support to humanitarian emergency relief including floods in Pakistan, the war in Ukraine and Amnesty International Iran appeal; and also to charities helping to alleviate the cost of living crisis. The practice undertook collective fundraising activities to support our Charities of the Year, Accumulate - the Art School for the Homeless in London and Help Bristol's Homeless. Over 2021/22 we donated £236,621 to 148 good causes and our staff team undertook 2,128 hours of volunteering.

BUILDING UTOPIA

BUILDING UTOPIA

Starting in April, we worked with our London Charity of the Year, Accumulate – the Art School for the Homeless, leading creative workshops over 10 weeks with people affected by homelessness. The participants were set the brief to use architectural model-making to create their own ideas of Utopia, and the project culminated in an exhibition we designed in July.

CHICKENSHED PERFORMANCE AT THE RIBA

CHICKENSHED PERFORMANCE AT THE RIBA

AHMM collaborated with young people from inclusive theatre company Chickenshed and RIBA Learning, with the young people exploring the RIBA headquarters in advance of its refurbishment. Using their own diverse, lived experience, they created a unique performance as part of London Festival of Architecture responding to the space, proposing ideas to help ensure that the refurbished building will be welcoming and accessible to all.

SUMMER SCHOOL

SUMMER SCHOOL

In July AHMM organised its fifth annual Summer School, a week-long course offering young people interested in architecture an experience working in a practice, an introduction to different aspects of architecture including modelmaking, sustainability and digital design as well benefiting from mentoring. 34 young people aged 15-19 joined the week in London, online and for the first time, in Bristol.

‘MEN’S SHED’ VISIT TO WHITE COLLAR FACTORY

‘MEN’S SHED’ VISIT TO WHITE COLLAR FACTORY

A group from St Luke’s Community Centre ‘Men’s Shed’ – a place for men aged over 55 - visited White Collar Factory in June as part of the London Festival of Architecture. With the area changing rapidly the visit provided a chance for the group to spend time in a building in their neighbourhood and explore its design.

SKETCH CLUB DRAWING FROM COLOMBIA

SKETCH CLUB DRAWING FROM COLOMBIA

To mark International Water Day in March, the Sketch Club and Partnerships group co-organised a watercolour workshop with environmental NGO Mision Gaia live from the tropical rainforest in Colombia. As well as undertaking a joint creative activity, and providing financial support, the group were able to learning first hand about Mision Gaia’s approach to sustainable development and their Mango Jam project.

ARCHITECTS BENEVOLENT SOCIETY #TIME2SKETCH

ARCHITECTS BENEVOLENT SOCIETY #TIME2SKETCH

AHMM was delighted to be headline sponsor of the Architects Benevolent Society #Time2Sketch competition in September, supporting the charity’s cost of living crisis appeal. Our Sketch Club organised a practice-wide drawing session and we also gave support, designing the colouring book made up of the winning drawings.

 

Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

In response to recommendations from AHMM’s ED&I group, this year the practice appointed its first Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Lead. The role will be responsible for the development and delivery of a range of recommendations from the practice’s existing working groups.

In June Rochelle Dalphinis was appointed ED&I Lead, a year long, full time secondment. It is hoped that this role will also develop external networks to maintain and share up-to-date knowledge, gain an understanding of best practices being applied elsewhere, and champion their application within the business.


black history month

black history month

For Black History Month 2022 we held three events for AHMM staff: a tour of Colonial London with Dr. Hannah-Rose Murray; a screening of the film Nubia Way; and a Friday night Who Do You Think You Are? presentation.

Women's history month

Women's history month

In March we invited architect and author Dr. Jane Hall to talk with Patricia Ribeiro and the practice about her new book 'Woman Made: Great Women Designers’.

 
Link Date Title Location
14.12.22 Ibex House granted planning permission date221214
14.12.22 Planning approval for No 1 Blackhorse Lane date221214
05.12.22 WAF Awards 2022 date221205
05.12.22 Gingerbread City 2022 date221205
01.12.22 FX Awards 2022 EH Smith date221201
01.12.22 AHMM school collaboration wins Architecture in Schools prize date221201
29.11.22 New London Awards 2022 Hawley Wharf 330 Gray's Inn Road 76 Southbank date221129
18.11.22 Planning consent for Lisson Grove date221118
16.11.22 AIA Central Oklahoma Design Excellence Awards Social Capital Classen16 The Well Western Gateway Elementary Wheeler Block 13 date221116
11.11.22 Brick Awards 2022 The Alder Centre date221111
09.11.22 AHMM APPOINTS EQUITY, DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION LEAD date221109
07.11.22 Net zero carbon: a guide for architects date221107
02.11.22 Building Better Healthcare Awards 2022 The Alder Centre date221102
02.11.22 Building Awards 2022 Bream Street date221102
21.10.22 AIA Central States Excellence in Design Awards Flamingo Tiki date221021
20.10.22 Pre-let agreed at Lansdowne House Lansdowne House date221020
19.10.22 Planning permission for Dovercourt Road date221019
06.10.22 AT Awards shortlist 2022 University of Amsterdam date221006
06.10.22 British Homes Awards 2022 The Vincent Wimbledon House date221006
22.09.22 Planning success for 217 Harrow Road 217 Harrow Road date220922
16.09.22 Planning win for the Citizen The Citizen date220916
12.09.22 Queen Elizabeth II, 1926-2022 date220912
08.09.22 The Arc tops out date220908
08.09.22 Planning success for Southwick date220908
26.09.22 AHMM welcomes five new Architecture Foundation residents White Collar Factory date220926
07.09.22 Open House London 2022 White Collar Factory The Post Building 1 Finsbury Avenue EH Smith date220907
06.09.22 Planning approval for Angel Square date220906
23.08.22 AJ Architecture Awards 2022 shortlists White Collar Factory New Shire Hall Bream Street date220823
04.08.22 Holloway wins WAFX Award Holloway date220804
28.07.22 The Palm House at Kew The Palm House at Kew date220728
20.07.22 Google India starts on site Google India date220720
12.07.22 Cambridgeshire Council officially opens New Shire Hall New Shire Hall date220712
07.07.22 Pedelle 2022 date220707
11.07.22 WAF Awards shortlist 2022 The Alder Centre 10 Lewis Cubitt Square Tower Hamlets Town Hall Bream Street Lansdowne House 330 Gray's Inn Road Wimbledon House Holloway date220711
07.07.22 Building Utopia date220707
22.07.22 @sohoplace: first new build West End theatre in 50 years opens this autumn date220722
01.08.22 Summer School 2022 date220801
13.06.22 Special performance with young people from Chickenshed date220613
08.06.22 AHMM at London Festival of Architecture White Collar Factory Morelands date220608
07.06.22 Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2022 Tower Hamlets Town Hall date220607
07.07.22 Planning success for West One Shopping Centre date220707
27.05.22 Church Road prize winner of the 2022 Don’t Move, Improve! Church Road date220527
25.05.22 Paul Monaghan appointed as a Mayor’s Design Advocate date220525
13.06.22 Architecture Foundation and AHMM residency programme 2022 White Collar Factory date220613
15.06.22 Applications open for AHMM Summer School 2022 date220615
23.06.22 RIBA National Awards 2022 date220623
13.05.22 The Alder Centre wins AIA UK Excellence in Design Award 2022 The Alder Centre date220513
11.05.22 Dr Craig Robertson joins the AJ’s Climate Champions podcast date220511
11.05.22 2 Ruskin Square tops out 2 Ruskin Square date220511
09.05.22 The Alder Centre shortlisted for the AIA UK Excellence in Design Awards 2022 The Alder Centre date220509
05.05.22 2022 RIBA London Award winners The Post Building Hawley Wharf Breakers Place date220505
05.05.22 Planning success for One Temple Way date220505
05.05.22 Planning approval for St Vincent Works date220505
29.04.22 TWO NEW BAILEY SQUARE WINS BCO NORTHERN REGION AWARD Two New Bailey date220429
27.04.22 Three AHMM projects shortlisted for the Building London Planning Awards 2022 The Post Building Hawley Wharf Park Central West, Elephant Park Park Central East, Elephant Park date220427
21.04.22 PLANNING APPROVAL FOR Keith House date220421
08.04.22 1 New Park Square completes at Edinburgh Park 1 New Park Square date220408
01.04.22 10 Lewis Cubitt Square opens 10 Lewis Cubitt Square date220401
31.03.22 Topping out ceremony at the Rowe The Rowe date220331
30.03.22 Housing Design Awards shortlist Leinster Avenue Cardiff Bute Street Riverside Community Living date220330
30.03.22 Planning success for Kingswear Road date220330
10.03.22 AHMM Director joins Oklahoma architects’ licensing board date220310
08.03.22 CIVIC TRUST AWARDS 2022 The Alder Centre date220308
01.03.22 2022 RIBA Regional Award shortlists announced The Post Building Two New Bailey Hawley Wharf The Vincent Breakers Place Wimbledon House date220301
18.02.22 AHMM appointed for St Mary’s Hospital redevelopment date220218
17.02.22 Integrated building performance evaluation at Burntwood School Burntwood School date220217
04.02.22 National Apprenticeships Week 2022 date220204
04.02.22 Planning permission for Boland’s Bakery in Dublin date220204
21.01.22 Cycle to MIPIM 2022 date220121
17.12.21 Alder Centre in running for MacEwen Award and Civic Trust Award date211217
02.02.22 Paul Monaghan joins The Davidson Prize judging panel date220202
02.02.22 Planning success for Cardiff Bute Street date220202
 

Allford
Hall
Monaghan
Morris