beyond.aco | 8th November, 2022 – The Keynote Speakers

Angelika Schmid (Werner Sobek, DE-Stuttgart)

„We see ourselves as both a think tank and a forge for ideas that will transform the building industry and guide it towards an emissions-free future.“

Angelika Schmid has been working at the renowned Werner Sobek office in Stuttgart since 2002. As an authorized signatory and team leader for structures, she manages large and extremely complex construction projects such as the adidas World of Sports or the new Stuttgart Central Station. Before working in Stuttgart, she worked for the office for several years as a project manager in New York. She studied engineering at the University Stuttgart and University Trondheim.

Founded by Prof. Dr. Dr. E.h. Dr. h.c. Werner Sobek in 1992, Werner Sobek is internationally acclaimed for engineering, design and sustainability. Today more than 400 employees from 40 different countries work at the company. While they work on all types of buildings and materials, they focus on the design and planning of supportive structures, facades and technical building equipment, as well as consulting on building physics.
Striving towards an emissions-free future and considerate use of resources, they create innovative designs and project-specific solutions. Renowned architects like Ingenhoven, Henn, JSWD, Ole Scheeren, and Zaha Hadid Architects among others have collaborated with them in the past.

www.wernersobek.com

Michael Rathgeb (ingenhoven associates, DE-Düsseldorf)

Michael Rathgeb is managing director at ingenhoven associates since 2019. He manages the 185,000 square meters main railway station project in Stuttgart, which was awarded the Global Holcim Award Gold for Sustainable Building in 2006 and the International Architecture Award from the Chicago Athenaeum Museum of Architecture in 2007. After his architectural studies at Innsbruck University and professional experience with projects of various sizes, the Austrian began his career at ingenhoven associates as project director in 2007. In 2012 he was appointed director and, since the middle of 2018, has been working in the team of managing directors with Christoph Ingenhoven and Martin Reuter.

In addition to specializing in complex infrastructure projects (public passenger transport, local and long-distance transport), Michael Rathgeb has extensive experience in the field of office and administration buildings. Rathgeb has been involved in projects such as the HDI headquarters in Hanover, University College Dublin, the Google headquarters in Palo Alto, and Marina One in Singapore.

www.ingenhovenarchitects.com

Alison Brooks (Alison Brooks Architects, GB-London)

„We are known for our investment in project-specific research. Our designs demonstrate conceptual rigour, sculptural quality as well as ingenious detailing with works encompassing urban design and housing, higher education buildings, private houses and public buildings for the arts.“

Alison Brooks is one of the UK’s most highly awarded and internationally acclaimed architects. A native of Ontario, she studied architecture at the University of Waterloo before moving to the UK in 1988. Since founding her practice in 1996 she has emerged as one of the UK’s most inventive architects with works encompassing urban design and housing, higher education buildings, private houses and public buildings for the arts. She is the only UK architect to have received all three of the profession’s most prestigious awards: the RIBA Stirling Prize, the Manser Medal (twice), and the Stephen Lawrence Prize.

Alison Brooks’ unique architectural approach springs from invested research into the specific geography, climate and cultures of each project so that her design solutions emerge as both unique and relevant to the constituencies they serve. This is exemplified by her recently completed Cohen Quadrangle at Exeter College, Oxford. The first to be designed by a female architect, this building demonstrates the conceptual rigour, sculptural quality and ingenious detailing that is her practice trademark.

Alison has dedicated much of her professional career to housing design, which she considers the social project of architecture and its most important form of civic building. She has completed over 1000 dwellings across the UK, including the Stirling Prize-winning Accordia, Cambridge; Stirling Prize-shortlisted Newhall Be, and multi-award-winning Ely Court. Recent high-profile commissions for mixed-use residential towers in London, Vancouver and Moscow. In the arts sector, she is currently designing an art museum and study centre for one of Cambridge’s largest Colleges. Her cultural projects include the Folkestone Performing Arts Centre, a memorable beacon for Folkestone’s arts communities, and the Smile, her world-famous timber pavilion for the 2016 London Design Festival. In 2020 Alison Brooks Architects joined an international longlist of eight practices considered for the new Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.

Alison has become a public voice for the profession advocating the role of women in architecture, the resurgence of building craft and the value of timber as expressive, low-carbon building technology. Named in 2012 by Debrett’s as one of ‘Britain’s 500 Most Influential, she was awarded BD Housing Architect of the Year and Architect of the Year. She was subsequently awarded the 2013 AJ Woman Architect of the Year in recognition of her work in housing, regeneration and education. In 2017 Alison was appointed Royal Designer for Industry by the Royal Society of Arts and selected as London Mayor’s Design Advocate. Alison was also honoured with the 2017 AJ 100 Contribution to the Profession Award, giving the keynote speech to the UK’s 100 largest practices. In 2020 her practice was awarded Dezeen Architect of the Year and Housing Architect of the Year.

Alison has served CABE / Design Council as National Design Review Panel Chair for over ten years and is a Trustee of Open City. She was a member of the 2009 Government advisory body The Farrell Review of Architecture and the Built Environment, juror for the RIBA Awards group from 2010-15, the 2011 Stirling Prize and the 2010 Lubetkin Prize. She serves on numerous international design competition juries, most recently for the Camden Highline Competition.

Alison Brooks has contributed to architectural education for over fifteen years as an External Examiner for the University of Central London, the University of Bath, the University of Lincoln and the Architectural Association. She taught a Diploma School Unit at the Architectural Association Diploma School from 2008-2010 and served as External Examiner from 2016-2019. In 2018 Alison was appointed as the John T. Dunlop Design Critic in Architecture at Harvard GSD. Since 2018 she has been Visiting Professor for the Masters in Collective Housing at ETSAM, Universidad Polite?cnica of Madrid. Alison lectures internationally on architecture and urban design.

In 2014 Alison was awarded an Alumni Achievement Award from the University of Waterloo, followed by a 2016 Doctorate of Engineering (Hon Causa).

www.alisonbrooksarchitects.com

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