Our work investigates how material and industrial cultures shape the world and challenges the regulations, supply chains and processes that to a large extent prescribe how the buildings we inhabit are made, function and feel. We think this can change and needs to change at speed. Modern methods of construction have the capacity to transform the way in which things are built and offer the space to generate new forms of culture in the construction industry.
Through our work we have demonstrated that low carbon local materials can be more affordable and durable than globally-sourced, petrochemical-derivative materials, and are capable of comfortably meeting and outperforming industry standards. The material resources on which our futures are dependent - softwood timber, stone, clay, lime, plant fibres and shiv - can be grown and sourced across the UK and their production is low intensity. As reducing embodied carbon in the construction industry becomes necessary, and as oil prices rise and we look towards a post Brexit economy the UK will need to rebuild its manufacturing economy and crucially make commitments to a low carbon approach.
In the UK current architectural languages predominantly belong to a lineage that is born from cis white male cultures. The fact that it is so hard for us to think and design beyond these languages is in part due to the fact that they are now embedded in the vocabulary of components, products, and regulations that frame architectural possibility. Our work explores the potential for a new architectural language to emerge through and from direct contact with materials and the processes of making and a creative interpretation of the regulations.
Construction and maintenance presently accounts for over 40% of total UK carbon emissions. 11% of the industry’s carbon emissions are derived from the manufacture of materials. Current housing models depend on large amounts of high-energy materials, mass-manufactured overseas, with short lifespans. If we are to halt the progress of ecological breakdown we need to radically rethink the logic of current construction methods, the materials we use and our approach to growth. In doing so it is likely that we will need to both recover some of our forgotten technologies and develop entirely new forms of architectural language.
Summer Islam
Summer Islam AADipl (hons) ARB is a founding Director of Material Cultures. Summer is an architect, educator and researcher. Her work is focussed on the holistic integration of design, construction technology, policy and strategy. Summer carries out research at the University of the Arts London and the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL). She has also taught at the University College London, the London Metropolitan University and the University of Cambridge. Summer recently published a ground-breaking research project for the region of Yorkshire and the North East in the UK; a study of the feasibility of biobased and circular construction across the region which explores the economic and ecological impact of a radical material transition for the entire supply chain of the construction industry.
Paloma Gormley
Paloma Gormley MA (Cantab) is a founding Director of Material Cultures. She is an internationally acclaimed designer responsible for a series of celebrated architectural and urban projects. Her work is rooted in an understanding of material technology and construction, underpinned by an appreciation of haptic knowledge and collaborative processes. Paloma is an experienced educator and researcher, and currently co-runs 'Construction in Detail' in the Spatial Studies department at the University of the Arts London. Previously she has taught at the Bartlett, University College London and the London Metropolitan University. Paloma has led on a number of significant demonstrator projects and is currently developing a 90 unit residential development in Lewes, Sussex.
George Massoud
George Massoud AA Dipl ARB RIBA is a Director at Material Cultures. George is an architect, educator and cultural worker. He is interested in how we can build a future rooted in mutual interdependence with the various ecologies that shape our built environment. This underlying philosophy is explored in the spaces he occupies as a practitioner: in the studio, in the classroom and in the community. In practice, George has extensive experience working on a range of arts projects, complex refurbishments and commercial developments. George is Unit Master at the Architectural Association, exploring how alternative social ecologies are shaped through material and spatial politics. He is also producer and founding member of POA, a feminist, queer community platform for reimagining value systems.
Selected Books
Material Reform
Material Cultures with Amica Dall
2022, Mack Books
Build: From High to Low Tech
Hinterland Architecture Studio
2022, Build Porto
Manual of Biogenic House Selections
Paul Lewis, Marc Tsurumaki, David J. Lewis
2022, ORO Editions
Super Thatch:
The new thatch architecture and sustainability culture
Oliver Lowenstien
2021, Fourth Door Books
Radical Architecture of the Future,
Beatrice Galilee
2020, Phaidon
This is Temporary:
How transient projects redefining architecture
Cate St Hill
2017, RIBA Publishing
New Architects 3, Britain’s Best Emerging Practices,
The Architecture Foundation
2016, Merrell
Clients
Collaborators
Selected Press
05.2023
The Big Picture: A Conversation with Material Cultures
Will Higginbotham, Well Life, Lived Well
05.2023
The Building Materials of the Future Might Be Growing in Your Backyard
Marianna Janowicz, Untapped Journal
02.2023
Green Labour: Material Reform and The Value of a Whale
George Kafka, The Architectural Review
01.2023
Homegrown show makes compelling case for post-carbon construction
Pamela Buxton, The RIBA Journal
01.2023
London architecture exhibitions 2023: a guide to the best shows this month
Ellie Stathaki, Wallpaper
01.2023
Material Reform: Building for a Post-Carbon Future
Vanessa Norwood, The London Society
12.2022
Eleanor Young, Stylepark
12.2022
5 Regenerative Design Principles by Material Cultures
Kendra Jackson, Azure Magazine
12.2022
In Material Reform, Material Cultures Rethinks the Cultures, Systems, and Infrastructures of How We Make Architecture
Material Cultures, The Architect’s Newspaper
11.2022
Design, Climate Action: Regenerative Exhibition Design
Sophie Tolhurst, Design Week
11.2022
This is What Post-Carbon Design Looks Like Now
David Thorpe, The Fifth Estate
07.2022
The Future is Hempcrete
Malaika Byng, Metropolis
04.2022
Best Practise
Eleanor Young, The RIBA Journal
07.2021
A New Sustainability Paradigm
Michael Pawlyn, Domus
06.2021
Make low-tech our mantra and design clean and simple
Edmund Fowles, The RIBA Journal
06.2021
In Practice: Material Cultures on decarbonising construction
The Architecture Review
05.2021
The tyranny of concrete and its costly carbon footprint
Layli Foroudi, The Financial Times
06.2021
Can design solve the housing Crisis?
Tracy Ingram, Frame Magazine
04.2021
How can low-tech and natural materials help avert the climate emergency?
Pamela Buxton, The RIBA Journal
09.2020
Prototype for a plant-based future
Icon Magazine, UK
07.2020
Unit 7 Students At The London Metropolitan University, Polyvalent Studio
Divisare
07.2020
Brand New Heroes
Elle, Germany
06.2020
From Farm to Form: Flat house by Practice Architecture
Architect’s Journal, UK
06.2020
Brand New Heroes
Elle, United Kingdom
05.2020
Flat House by Practice Architecture and Material Cultures
Blueprint, UK
04.2020
Flat House:A small building proposes a radical – and necessary – rethink of the construction industry
Architecture Today, UK
Material Cultures Policies
Our work investigates how material and industrial cultures shape the world and challenges the regulations, supply chains and processes that to a large extent prescribe how the buildings we inhabit are made, function and feel. We think this can change and needs to change at speed. Modern methods of construction have the capacity to transform the way in which things are built and offer the space to generate new forms of culture in the construction industry.
Through our work we have demonstrated that low carbon local materials can be more affordable and durable than globally-sourced, petrochemical-derivative materials, and are capable of comfortably meeting and outperforming industry standards. The material resources on which our futures are dependent - softwood timber, stone, clay, lime, plant fibres and shiv - can be grown and sourced across the UK and their production is low intensity. As reducing embodied carbon in the construction industry becomes necessary, and as oil prices rise and we look towards a post Brexit economy the UK will need to rebuild its manufacturing economy and crucially make commitments to a low carbon approach.
In the UK current architectural languages predominantly belong to a lineage that is born from cis white male cultures. The fact that it is so hard for us to think and design beyond these languages is in part due to the fact that they are now embedded in the vocabulary of components, products, and regulations that frame architectural possibility. Our work explores the potential for a new architectural language to emerge through and from direct contact with materials and the processes of making and a creative interpretation of the regulations.
Construction and maintenance presently accounts for over 40% of total UK carbon emissions. 11% of the industry’s carbon emissions are derived from the manufacture of materials. Current housing models depend on large amounts of high-energy materials, mass-manufactured overseas, with short lifespans. If we are to halt the progress of ecological breakdown we need to radically rethink the logic of current construction methods, the materials we use and our approach to growth. In doing so it is likely that we will need to both recover some of our forgotten technologies and develop entirely new forms of architectural language.
Summer Islam
Summer Islam AADipl (hons) ARB is a founding Director of Material Cultures. Summer is an architect, educator and researcher. Her work is focussed on the holistic integration of design, construction technology, policy and strategy. Summer carries out research at the University of the Arts London and the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL). She has also taught at the University College London, the London Metropolitan University and the University of Cambridge. Summer recently published a ground-breaking research project for the region of Yorkshire and the North East in the UK; a study of the feasibility of biobased and circular construction across the region which explores the economic and ecological impact of a radical material transition for the entire supply chain of the construction industry.
Paloma Gormley
Paloma Gormley MA (Cantab) is a founding Director of Material Cultures. She is an internationally acclaimed designer responsible for a series of celebrated architectural and urban projects. Her work is rooted in an understanding of material technology and construction, underpinned by an appreciation of haptic knowledge and collaborative processes. Paloma is an experienced educator and researcher, and currently co-runs 'Construction in Detail' in the Spatial Studies department at the University of the Arts London. Previously she has taught at the Bartlett, University College London and the London Metropolitan University. Paloma has led on a number of significant demonstrator projects and is currently developing a 90 unit residential development in Lewes, Sussex.
George Massoud
George Massoud AA Dipl ARB RIBA is a Director at Material Cultures. George is an architect, educator and cultural worker. He is interested in how we can build a future rooted in mutual interdependence with the various ecologies that shape our built environment. This underlying philosophy is explored in the spaces he occupies as a practitioner: in the studio, in the classroom and in the community. In practice, George has extensive experience working on a range of arts projects, complex refurbishments and commercial developments. George is Unit Master at the Architectural Association, exploring how alternative social ecologies are shaped through material and spatial politics. He is also producer and founding member of POA, a feminist, queer community platform for reimagining value systems.
Selected Books
Material Reform
Material Cultures with Amica Dall
2022, Mack Books
Build: From High to Low Tech
Hinterland Architecture Studio
2022, Build Porto
Manual of Biogenic House Selections
Paul Lewis, Marc Tsurumaki, David J. Lewis
2022, ORO Editions
Super Thatch:
The new thatch architecture and sustainability culture
Oliver Lowenstien
2021, Fourth Door Books
Radical Architecture of the Future,
Beatrice Galilee
2020, Phaidon
This is Temporary:
How transient projects redefining architecture
Cate St Hill
2017, RIBA Publishing
New Architects 3, Britain’s Best Emerging Practices,
The Architecture Foundation
2016, Merrell
Clients
Collaborators
Selected Press
05.2023
The Big Picture: A Conversation with Material Cultures
Will Higginbotham, Well Life, Lived Well
05.2023
The Building Materials of the Future Might Be Growing in Your Backyard
Marianna Janowicz, Untapped Journal
02.2023
Green Labour: Material Reform and The Value of a Whale
George Kafka, The Architectural Review
01.2023
Homegrown show makes compelling case for post-carbon construction
Pamela Buxton, The RIBA Journal
01.2023
London architecture exhibitions 2023: a guide to the best shows this month
Ellie Stathaki, Wallpaper
01.2023
Material Reform: Building for a Post-Carbon Future
Vanessa Norwood, The London Society
12.2022
Eleanor Young, Stylepark
12.2022
5 Regenerative Design Principles by Material Cultures
Kendra Jackson, Azure Magazine
12.2022
In Material Reform, Material Cultures Rethinks the Cultures, Systems, and Infrastructures of How We Make Architecture
Material Cultures, The Architect’s Newspaper
11.2022
Design, Climate Action: Regenerative Exhibition Design
Sophie Tolhurst, Design Week
11.2022
This is What Post-Carbon Design Looks Like Now
David Thorpe, The Fifth Estate
07.2022
The Future is Hempcrete
Malaika Byng, Metropolis
04.2022
Best Practise
Eleanor Young, The RIBA Journal
07.2021
A New Sustainability Paradigm
Michael Pawlyn, Domus
06.2021
Make low-tech our mantra and design clean and simple
Edmund Fowles, The RIBA Journal
06.2021
In Practice: Material Cultures on decarbonising construction
The Architecture Review
05.2021
The tyranny of concrete and its costly carbon footprint
Layli Foroudi, The Financial Times
06.2021
Can design solve the housing Crisis?
Tracy Ingram, Frame Magazine
04.2021
How can low-tech and natural materials help avert the climate emergency?
Pamela Buxton, The RIBA Journal
09.2020
Prototype for a plant-based future
Icon Magazine, UK
07.2020
Unit 7 Students At The London Metropolitan University, Polyvalent Studio
Divisare
07.2020
Brand New Heroes
Elle, Germany
06.2020
From Farm to Form: Flat house by Practice Architecture
Architect’s Journal, UK
06.2020
Brand New Heroes
Elle, United Kingdom
05.2020
Flat House by Practice Architecture and Material Cultures
Blueprint, UK
04.2020
Flat House:A small building proposes a radical – and necessary – rethink of the construction industry
Architecture Today, UK