New London Architecture

Architecture for kids podcast

Friday 22 September 2023

Antonio Capelao

Founding Director
Architecture for Kids CIC

Launched this summer, Architecture for Kids podcast series, explores the growing consensus around the need to engage children and young people in the shaping of the built environment, by talking to practitioners and creatives about their work, while engaging with a broader audience (parents, guardians, carers, and educators) to inform them as well as to encourage their children to join the discussion.

Last year Antonio Capelao set up Architecture for Kids CIC, a community interest company (CIC), to inspire and to promote creativity and self-confidence in children and young people by engaging them in discussions about architecture, design, and sustainability. It is a hands-on problem solving spatial programme, that focus on sharing with children and young people knowledge about the built environment and the architect’s skills, through a process of conversation, site visits, drawing, and making – but always with the children and young people in charge of their own thinking and decision making.

Antonio (Architecture for Kids CIC) hosts the Architecture for kids podcast series 1 coproduced with the Built Environment Trust, the Thornton Education Trust, and the Welsh School of Architecture Cardiff University, to bring together practitioners and creatives working with children and young people to inspire them to make the built environment more inclusive, diverse, and better suited for their needs and interests.

CEOs surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers reported that as they anticipate an increasingly automated workplace, the human skills that they will most prize are ‘problem solving, adaptability, collaboration, leadership, creativity, and innovation’.

We are aware that our beliefs and opinions stem from our childhood, and are influenced by the developmental context in which we are brought up, and reinforced by peer groups and cultural influences – ultimately, influencing how we think of ourselves and the world around us. Therefore, if we want to change attitudes towards architecture and the built environment, and foster creativity and problem solving, we must focus on the children and young people.
 
Victoria Thornton, chair of the Thornton Education Trust, has played a leading role in helping to engage children and young people with the built environment: 

“Architecture affects everyone, yet it is the one subject that is not embedded into children’s lives. Young people’s voices are often excluded from discussions and decisions on urban design whilst creative and design subjects are excluded from the school curriculum.
If we are to create a significant step change, the architectural professions need to provide many more opportunities in which young people and children have a voice about their future environment. We believe small actions create major impact.”

Inspired by this and, by focusing on practitioners’ and creatives’ practical experiences in ‘pedagogy in practice’, the podcast brings some light to the interplay between the fields of the built environment, architecture, creative industries in general and education. This interplay is understood as shared knowledge between the practitioner/creative and the school teacher.

Architecture for kids podcast series 1 also seeks to highlight the way in which children and young people can become ‘active’ researchers, designers and makers through codesign, coproduction, and cocreation. In each episode of Architecture for Kids, Antonio engages in a conversation with practitioners and creatives who are working with children and young people to facilitate their participation in the shaping of the built environment and the creative industries.

Dr Hiral Patel, director of engagement, Welsh School of Architecture Cardiff University welcomed the collaboration and the podcast series, and noted:

“The natural and built environment offers an incredible learning environment to young people. By immersing themselves in their neighbourhood, they can understand complex challenges, articulate creative responses and build capabilities to actively engage in shaping their environments. The Architecture for Kids podcast series champions this idea, which is also at the core of the engagement strategy at the Welsh School of Architecture.
The podcast series will be a valuable resource for academics, school teachers, parents, local authorities and community groups in the context of the new Curriculum for Wales. Most importantly, I hope this podcast series will enthuse young people to study architecture and design-related subjects and craft their careers in the creative industries.”

The Architecture for Kids podcast also looks at the need to bring practitioners with the required creative skills, knowledge and perspectives into the arts programme of the national school curriculums, through foundational policy change. Putting politics aside, this approach is very much aligned with Keir Starmer’s ambitions for education, outlined in his “five missions” speech in Manchester.

The speech highlighted the need to reform the UK’s school curriculum to help pupils and students break down five big barriers to educational attainment; language; confidence; an outdated curriculum; a culture of rejecting vocational training; and a “soft bigotry” of low expectations. A key element of this is the growing focus on vocational skills and creativity, in a bid to manage the on-trend challenge of artificial intelligence and the potential threat it presents to many traditional forms of employment.

We share the same aspiration as many other practitioners and creatives in this emerging sector, which is ‘to open-up the built environment to children and young people for them to become genuine participants’. We want to see teachers empowered, so they can take ‘greater control over what is taught in school’, innovating in how they can teach and developing ‘new approaches to learning’ that inspire children and young people to ‘deeper learning’.

Sandra Hedblad, head of learning, The Built Environment Trust strongly believes the podcast is very much aligned with the Trust’s views, to encourage everyone to engage with the built environment and hence her support and interest in this collaboration, as she pointed out:

“Working at the Built Environment Trust combines two things I’m really passionate about: the built environment and people. The Trust’s Learning programme focuses on reaching new audiences outside the built environment and to connect, inspire and empower people to appreciate and direct the impact their surroundings have on their daily lives.
To have played an active role in making this podcast happen has been both interesting and rewarding. There is so much talent and an array of amazing projects out there.”

The first series of the Architecture for Kids podcast includes a line up of national and international practitioners and creatives. The second series will focus on interviews with children and young people, and a third series on their parents, guardians/carers. The podcast episodes can be downloaded on Apple, Spotify, Google, Amazon, and Youtube.

For further information on Architecture for Kids, contact: info@antoniocapelao-portfolio.co.uk
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Antonio Capelao

Founding Director
Architecture for Kids CIC



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