The Olympian Architects T-shirt by Peter Murray at Dezeen Super Store

The controversial T-shirt worn by New London Architecture chair Peter Murray in protest of marketing rules that prevent the architects of Olympic venues from promoting their work is now available at Dezeen Super Store.

Olympic Marketing Protest T-shirt by Peter Murray at Dezeen Super Store

The T-shirt lists the names of architects and engineers who worked on the games but can’t publicise the fact due to a marketing agreement with London 2012 organisers.

Olympic Marketing Protest T-shirt by Peter Murray at Dezeen Super Store

The campaign Murray started at a Creative Industries Summit in London gained pace when the RIBA posed in the shirts in front of a banner that was hung in front of its headquarters and printed with the names (below).

The Olympian Architects T-shirts by Peter Murray at Dezeen Super Store

The shirts are available in small, medium, large and extra large and cost £20, with one pound from each sale going to Article 25, a UK organisation that helps provide shelter for victims of natural disasters.

Olympic Marketing Protest T-shirt by Peter Murray at Dezeen Super Store

Dezeen readers can get 10% off any Dezeen Super Store purchase (excluding sale stock and Jambox) and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

Olympic Marketing Protest T-shirt by Peter Murray at Dezeen Super Store

The T-shirts are illustrated and distributed by The What Now? Collaborative.

See more products for sale at Dezeen Super Store »

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1 July – 30 September 2012

The post The Olympian Architects T-shirt by Peter Murray
at Dezeen Super Store
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RIBA joins protest against Olympic marketing rules

RIBA join protest against Olympic marketing rules

Dezeen Wire: the Royal Institute of British Architects has joined the campaign to promote the architects and engineers who designed buildings for the London 2012 Olympic games but have been unable to promote their work because of a marketing agreement with the event organisers.

RIBA president Angela Brady, President of the Institute of Structural Engineers John Nolan and New London Architecture chair Peter Murray have today hung a banner down the facade of the RIBA headquarters in London listing all of those involved under the slogan “The Architects and Engineers who designed and built London 2012″.

The protest follows our story about how Murray wore a T-shirt listing the names to a Creative Industries Summit at Lancaster House earlier this week and attendees at today’s event can be seen wearing the same shirt.

Download a pdf of the design here so you can print your own.

See all our stories about the London 2012 Olympics »

Photography is by Jack Shaw.

Here’s a press release from the RIBA:


Team ‘Design GB’ stage ‘name drop’ event to promote the firms who built the Olympics

Today the RIBA staged a protest with the architects and engineers who built the Olympic buildings. Strict contractual rules have meant that they are not able to do any pro-active work to promote their role in London 2012. In an effort to encourage LOCOG to do more to promote, and to allow the architects and engineers to promote, their great work on the inspiring Olympic buildings, they did a literal “name drop” by unfurling a banner from RIBA’s central London HQ listing the names of all the design and engineering companies involved in the Olympics.

The banner was dropped by RIBA President, Angela Brady, President of the Institute of Structural Engineers, John Nolan and Peter Murray, Director of New London Architecture. Olympic architects and engineers surrounded the banner wearing T-shirts listing all the firms involved in designing the Games.

RIBA President Angela Brady, said today:

“Architects and engineers have delivered incredible buildings which are hosting the London 2012 Games right now. We are calling on LOCOG to be proud of our architectural and engineering achievements for the London 2012 Olympics and do everything they can to promote the buildings and all the designers involved. Time is of the essence and we want them to start doing it now, and very importantly, to let architects get out there and talk about their work now. Let’s shout about the great design and engineering talent that the UK has to offer and not miss this valuable opportunity to do so.”

President of the Institute of Structural Engineers said today:

“The London Olympics is an exemplar for building design throughout the world. It seems nonsensical in a time when so much of our industry is struggling that the opportunity to market ‘construction/design GB’ is being thrown away by short-sighted government policy.”

Peter Murray, Director of New London Architecture, said today:

“When the government called for businesses involved in the Olympics to promote themselves overseas to support the British economy it seems crazy that architects, consultants and other suppliers to the Olympics are gagged in this draconian way”.

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Olympic marketing rules
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