New immigration rules are “hugely damaging” for design in London

New immigration rules are "hugely damaging" for design in London

News: leading figures from London’s design institutions have warned that new immigration rules which make it harder for international students to stay in the UK after graduation could be a “disaster” for the city.

Kieran Long, senior curator at the V&A museum, described London as “a crossroads for great creative people to come and learn from their peers,” but warned: “Anything that stops that would be a disaster.”

Design Museum director Deyan Sudjic said: “London has really based its success on having 150 years of great art schools. They have been somewhat industrialised, got too big, and the government has also got quite curious about allowing students to stay once they’ve graduated. We need to be an open city, that’s what London always been.”

Last month the UK government announced changes to immigration rules that add “genuineness” interviews to the existing points-based hurdles students must clear if they wish to extend their leave to remain in the country once their course ends.

The new rules also introduce the power to refuse an application for a student visa extension where the applicant cannot speak English.

“It would be a disaster for London,” agreed Nigel Coates, professor emeritus at the Royal College of Art. “For creative people, London is the most attractive city in the world, partly because of its schools. But the government, confused as always, seems to be shooting itself – and us – in the foot.”

“It’s making it very, very difficult for AA students,” said Sadie Morgan, president of the Architectural Association school. “They give huge amounts to the UK economy. It’s a really big issue. It’s damaging and short-sighted of the UK government. They’re looking to be doing something aggressive about immigration but it is hugely damaging for schools like ours.”

Architectural firms can apply for visas on behalf of overseas graduates they want to employ, but Morgan said it was a “convoluted and expensive” process.

Sudjic added: “London is a remarkably successful place at attracting really smart, gifted young designers. They come to study here and lots of them build a practice here, not necessarily based on clients here, but on clients all around the world. London is a great place to be but it can’t be complacent and one of the things it has to do is go on attracting smart and new people and get them to stay.”

“London is welcoming, enterprising and full of opportunities”, said Max Fraser, deputy director of the London Design Festival. “It’s multiculturalism is one of its great selling points. We want to retain the best talent and the new visa restrictions are not conducive to that.”

London mayor Boris Johnson is understood to share the institutions’ concerns and convened a meeting with leading London arts schools this summer to discuss the issue. However, the mayor has no influence over national immigration policy. The UK’s Conservative government introduced the rules to appease backbench MPs, who demanded a tougher stance on immigration.

Dezeen spoke to leading figures in the design world during the London Design Festival last month to get their views on London’s position as a centre for design and the reasons for its current strength as a creative hub. The pre-eminence of London’s arts schools and its openness to immigration were the most-cited reason for the city’s standing as one of the world’s leading international centres for design.

“I think London has always been a place thats incredibly tolerant of new things, of people arriving in the city,” said Kieran Long. “We know that the city is based on immigration, and the people that are already here tolerating them and we’re really comfortable with that. In terms of design and architecture, we have some of the greatest schools in the world, a lot of people come to study here.”

He added: “I think there are threats to that, certainly we should keep London as open as it possibly can be and any political agenda that’s about closing that down somehow, to me, is anathema to what London really is.”

Sudjic said: “London is a great place to be but it can’t be complacent and one of the things it has to do is go on attracting smart and new people and get them to stay.”

Alex de Rijke, dean of the School of Architecture at the Royal College of Art, added that funding cuts and the rising reputation of schools abroad presented new threats to London. “Inevitably you produce a lot of architects that stay for a while then go and forge a career, whereas perhaps in the future that will not be the case as emerging economies all over the world will inevitably take over cultural production. So I see, not necessarily a lessening in the influence of education here, but certainly more of a diaspora of talent.”

“As other universities around the world offer amazing opportunities for the global student population, it’s increasingly difficult to be able to offer added value,” agreed Morgan. “The added value is being able to stay and work in the UK because of the huge kudos you get from working for UK practices.”

In an interview with Dezeen during the festival Patrizia Moroso, creative director of leading Italian furniture brand Moroso, praised London’s openness to students from overseas and contrasted it with the situation in Italy, where she says underinvestment in schools is leading to the collapse of its creative industries.

“The schools [in Italy] are collapsing,” she said. “When I see our universities and design schools, they are not the best in the world, they are not so important unfortunately. If you don’t give importance to learning, not immediately but in ten years you lose a generation of material culture.”

Last month the mayor of London proposed a new “London visa” to allow exceptional creative talents to bypass the lengthy new visa application system to set up businesses in London. He told the Financial Times (£): “It is a clear message to the elite of Silicon Valley or the fashionistas of Beijing that London is the place they should come to develop ideas, build new businesses and be part of an epicentre for global talent.”

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Casa Slamp by Nigel Coates

More cardboard design: Italian lighting brand Slamp worked with designer Nigel Coates to create a cardboard house for displaying the company’s range of lights.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

A team of ten young designers from Slamp took part in a workshop with the brand’s art director Coates to create a neutral backdrop for capturing the lighting designs.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

Designs by Coates, Zaha Hadid and various others were set among cardboard furniture arranged into rooms at Slamp’s headquarters just outside Rome.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

Book shelves, kitchen appliances and cutlery were all crafted from the brown material and set out to create different environments around the home.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

Three hundred and fifty square metres of cardboard were milled and assembled using a hot glue gun over the ten-day workshop.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

Other designs that utilise cardboard include a pavilion in Madrid by Shigeru Ban and an internet shopping collection store in San Sebastian.

See more cardboard architecture and design »
See more products by Slamp »

Here’s some more information sent to us by Slamp:


In a workshop with Nigel Coates “Casa Slamp” was born

A special cardboard house by Slamp Creative Team.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

The premise

Nigel Coates, Slamp art director since 2007, gathers ten young designers from the creative department. The boys, coming from the best design schools, are 24 years old on the average, some have been working in the company for few months, someone for few days, someone for a couple of years.

They discovered Slamp as a space where they can express their energy, with the certainty of being able to compare themselves to big international names.

Coates supports them with the three seniors of the group in order to give them more expertise: Luca Mazza (head of the creative department), Stefano Papi (responsible for the engineering) and Adriano Rachele (full-time designer – Red Dot in 2012).

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

The brief is clear

Designing a setting for the next photo shooting of Slamp’s lamps.

The need is to create a neutral architecture without deflecting attention away from the products but, on the contrary that is able to enhance their decorative and lighting effects.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

The brainstorming

The location is Slamp’s headquarters, just outside Rome, in the 200-square-metre open space of the creative department, among being defined prototypes and history of design volumes, with a classic rock soundtrack played by iTunes Radio.

Around the six-metre table (also designed by the department few years before), lines on the sketch book are about to be traced, brains are about to be set and opinions of all kinds are about to be discussed.

The academic wisdom of Nigel Coates, and the technical know-how of seniors, immediately lead to identify the solution of cardboard.

Furniture, accessories, and even a mid-century radio are sketched. A healthy competition in the group, mixed with a game of tips and contamination among everyone is arising.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

The realization

Numerical control milling machines are activated, more than 350-square-metres of cardboard are used, hot glue guns are switched on. With 2680 joints and almost 1000 creases, the set is ready in less than 10 days and does not betray any of the Slamp values: it is original, experimental, innovative and evocative.

Casa Slamp by Slamp Creative Team

The result is Casa Slamp

A real home where every room becomes a set to show how our lamps perfectly fit to different home environments.

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Nigel Coates
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“It’s just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building”

In our third movie about this year’s World Architecture Festival and Inside Festival, architect, designer and Inside Festival jury chair Nigel Coates discusses his breakthrough interiors project Caffè Bongo and explains what he will be looking for when judging the awards. 

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"
Middle and Over Wallop restaurant by Nigel Coates at Glyndebourne opera house

“I don’t really see interior design as a discipline,” says Coates. “I see it as a phenomenon. I call it ‘atmos’: when something special happens in an interior which isn’t just functional or stylistic.”

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"
Otaru Marittimo Hotel by Nigel Coates

He goes on to explain that, for him, a good interior “needs to communicate something extra. Not just to a visitor but to the person who lives in it, who’s familiar with it. It needs to create a warmth, cause a kind of alchemy in the way you exist in it.”

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"
Caffè Bongo, Tokyo

Coates says his breakthrough in interiors came in 1986 with Caffè Bongo in Tokyo. Inspired by Italian director Federico Fellini’s 1960s movie La Dolce Vita, the café combined classical statues and architectural elements with parts of an aeroplane that had seemingly crashed into it.

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"

“[It] may seem completely wild,” says Coates. “But I still assert that the crashed aircraft into that building was calm compared with the other nonsense that was going on up and down the street.

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"

“There was an aircraft wing at the top of the window. Charles Jencks described it as a crash. I would see it more as a fusion of the biggest object that symbolises movement and the architectural condition of the window.”

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"
The Waterhouse at South Bund by Neri&Hu, winner of the 2011 Inside Festival awards

When judging the awards for this year’s Inside Festival, which takes place in Singapore in October, Coates will be looking for projects that “create a sort of chemistry”.

Watch our movies with all the Inside Festival awards winners from 2011 »

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"

He says: “What I want to see is the translation of an idea. If it’s just based on style and nice finishes, even clever organisation, that’s not enough. The idea needs to translate into some kind of sensual experience, it needs to capture you.

“Interiors can be dismissed, but if we’re talking about excellence, I think it’s just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building.”

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"
Nigel Coates

Inside Festival award entries close 10 June. See here for how to enter.

The music featured in the above movie is a track called HKPF by UK producer Sun Yin. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen music Project.

"It's just as hard to do a good interior as it is to do a good building"

www.worldarchitecturefestival.com
www.insidefestival.com

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as it is to do a good building”
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Competition: five copies of Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates to be won

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

Competition: we’ve teamed up with Architectural Design (AD) to give away five copies of Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates, the latest title from the AD Primers series.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

Narrative Architecture gives an overview of Coates’ work with NATO (Narrative Architecture Today), the experimental movement he founded to explore the stories of buildings.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

The group’s projects are presented alongside those of other contemporary architects, including William Kent, Antoni Gaudí, Eero Saarinen, Ettore Sottsass, Superstudio, Rem Koolhaas and FAT.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

The book contains over 120 colour images and is published by Wiley.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Narrative Architecture” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.

Read our privacy policy here.

Narrative Architecture by Nigel Coates

Competition closes 6 June 2012. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

Here’s some more information from the publishers:


Coates explores the potential for narrative as a way of interpreting buildings from ancient history through to the present. It features architects as diverse as William Kent, Antoni Gaudí, Eero Saarinen, Ettore Sottsass, Superstudio, Rem Koolhaas and FAT.

The book provides an overview of the work of NATO and Coates, as well as chapters on other contemporary designers. In so doing it signposts narrative’s significance as a design approach that can aid architecture to remain relevant in this complex, multidisciplinary and multi-everything age.

Nigel Coates is an architect, designer and educator. Along with eight of his ex-students, he founded the NATO group in 1983. With Doug Branson he began Branson Coates Architecture in 1985, and together they built extensively in Japan and the UK. He is a prolific product and furniture designer, and has designed for Hitch Mylius, Alessi, Fornasetti and Slamp. His drawings and furniture are in the collection of the V&A.

Nigel Coates retires from Royal College of Art


Dezeenwire:
architect Nigel Coates is to retire from his role as head of architecture at the Royal College of Art in London after 16 years.

The college announced that industrial designer James Dyson is to succeed Terence Conran as Provost of the college in December last year (see our earlier Dezeenwire story).

Two new courses will be added to its program to create a new School of Architecture comprising 200 students.

More about Nigel Coates on Dezeen »
More about the Royal College of Art on Dezeen »

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Animalia by Nigel Coates for Fratelli Boffi

In Milan next month London architect Nigel Coates will launch a collection of furniture including modular seating with pebble-like forms upholstered in tweed, leather and tapestries of hunting scenes. (more…)

Tokyo Designers Week interviews: Nigel Coates

Tokyo Designers Week 09: architect and designer Nigel Coates describes the “complete chaos” of Tokyo in this final installment in our series of short interviews commissioned for the Tokyo Desigers Week official guide, which was produced by Dezeen. (more…)

Creatures, Corona and Pacis by Nigel Coates for Slamp

squ-slamp-by-nigel-coates-tutte-e-3-creatures-5.jpg

Milan 09: British architect and designer Nigel Coates exhibited three lamps designed for Italian lighting company Slamp at Euroluce in Milan last week. (more…)