img(height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=2939831959404383&ev=PageView&noscript=1")

A challenge to the familiar image

Brick has huge creative as well as practical potential, says Hugh Pearman

In association with the

Brick is such a familiar material. But I bet you’ve never seen it used in the way that sculptor Alex Chinneck does, confounding our expectations of the material to produce playful illusions that amuse and intrigue. 

Chinneck is taking part in an exhibition of work by artists who use brick as part of their creative practices. Organised to coincide with the Brick Development Association’s Design Day – Brick Works! on June 16, the show – at The Building Centre in London – aims to stimulate ideas on the creative use of brick.

Of course architects are unlikely to be melting brick façades or flipping elevations as Chinneck has. But there is huge scope for exploiting the material’s creative potential as well as its practical virtues, spurred on most notably by the recent success of O’Donnell + Tuomey’s stunning perforated façade for the LSE’s Saw Swee Hock student centre. And one of the most prominent new London office developments to complete last year, Turnmill, is resplendent in thousands of Roman bricks. 

This supplement, published in collaboration with the Brick Development Association, should help stimulate some further creative responses. When we asked speakers at the BDA Design Day – Brick Works! to nominate their favourite bricks and brick buildings, we were inundated with enthusiastic responses. Clamp-fired, heritage, glazed, everyone has a special favourite. 

But choosing the right brick is just part of the story; it’s what you do with it that really counts. We hope you find some inspiration in the projects featured here.

Hugh Pearman 

Editor, The RIBA Journal

Latest

Shocking reports from the RIBA and ARB revealing dangerously low wellbeing among architects prompt RIBA president Muyiwa Oki to insist we make a just and supportive workplace more than a platitude

Make wellbeing more than a platitude, demands Muyiwa Oke

Continuing our mini-series, Wayne Head is enthralled by this account of Detroit's underground music scene, which thrived in the buildings left empty by the city's decline

Wayne Head is enthralled by this account of how Detroit's underground music scene benefited from the city's industrial decline

Create a centre of conservation excellence in Norfolk, design an artistic trail through an Oxfordshire housing development, work on the regeneration of a County Durham harbourside - some of the latest architecture contracts and competitions from across the industry

Latest: Norman church preservation

There’s a distinct theme of preservation in this selection of must-reads, looking at historic materials, restoration and retrofitting, and why we should design out hazardous materials

Investigations into indoor air quality, retrofitting historic buildings and heritage materials

We need to boost our vocational workforce, which starts with the buildings that deliver the training. Funding, planning and the role of the architect are critical

Ways to design buildings that enable effective teaching