Over three consecutive years (2011-2013), Carmody Groarke developed a concept for Frieze Art Fair that balanced the quality of the art space, the social experience and the existing context. The architectural idea was to construct a series of interlinked, translucent pavilions surrounding the perimeter of the large exhibition tents. The pavilions, located adjacent to the exhibition spaces, were constructed as timber-lined “rooms” arranged around the existing trees within the park.
Working closely with the families of the victims of the 7 July 2005 bombings, Carmody Groarke designed a permanent memorial to commemorate the worst terrorist attacks in peacetime London. The singular and collective loss inflicted by the bombings has informed the character of the memorial. Fifty-two 85kg stainless steel cast vertical pillars, each representing one of the 52 lives lost. Through the language of abstract architecture, the memorial is intended to be a symbol of reconciliation for the families, as well as a permanent reminder for generations to come of the devastating effects of the bombings.


Victoria & Albert Museum’s Members Room by Carmody Groarke. The design has subtly restored and retained existing spatial characetr and detail, and where appropriate, reinvented architectural features including lighting and furniture.
The idea that architecture touches and guides all facets and corners of the lives we lead—from the mundane, to the emotional, the commemorative, cerebral, celebratory, sad, thrilling, temporary, indoor, outdoor, urban, and otherwise—is a simple, but mostly underrated thought. The thinking behind the buildings in a city will navigate the years to come, set the lay of the land, and pilot—in one way or another—the way we lead our lives. The way we will remember the past, dream of the future, or speculate the present.
This is Kevin Carmody of
Images from Kevin Carmody’s ‘Territory of Architecture’ lecture held at Bricksworks Sydney Studio. The lecture was the first for Brickworks International Speaker Series for this year, an event inagurated in 2016.
Addressing a rapt, intimate gathering at
“I’d like to start by talking about London—it feels relevant sitting in Sydney,” says Kevin, who is a Canberra-native but shipped over to the UK in the late 90s, met Andrew Groarke while working for
Gin Lane by William Hogarth.
Entrance to Carmody Groarke’s Studio in London.
For Kevin, Gin Lane illustrates a few things. It depicts a spot near to the location of the Carmody Groarke studio in Shorts Gardens, as a start. More metaphorically, however, Kevin sees it as an exaggerated but somehow realistic scene. A reminder that “a city is an accumulation of things, not just one thing… and that architecture is the backdrop to real life.”
Studio East Dining was built on top of a 35m high multi-storey car park within the live construction site of Westfield Stratford City development in East London. The temporary pavilion provided elevated views across London’s 2012 Olympic site. The project was built within ten weeks from initial briefing to opening night. With a life span of only three weeks, the 800m2 lightweight structure was constructed with hired materials borrowed from the existing construction site.
In Carmody Groarke’s 11 years, the practice has viewed its work as a public, civic quest. This bigger picture, almost fringe approach has earned them accolades even in their earliest of days, like the New York Prize for Architecture, the Architectural Review Emerging Architecture Award, and the D&AD Yellow Pencil Award for spatial design. Their projects have received several RIBA National, Regional, and Special awards, including most recently—a Regional award for a new build private house made of red
From their sprawling temporary marquee for Frieze Art Fair, to Studio East Dining for the London Olympics, and their award-winning 7 July Memorial – each Carmody Groarke project is an eye opener to a wider field view of architecture—resistant to what’s been defined before. To say they work innovatively, or outside the box doesn’t really cut it. It’s what you could call a human-centred approach, in which their client is the city and its people and their future. Here are just a select few of our favourite Carmody Groarke ideas.
Temporary Museum at Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s Hill House.
Temporary Museum at Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s Hill House // One of Scotland’s most significant architectural icons—Charles Rennie Mackinosh’s 1938 Hill House, some 30km west of Glasgow—needed to close for conservation works that could run for as long as 12 years. Rather than board up the home, which was usually open to the public, the National Trust of Scotland wanted to create a
Carmody Groarke’s idea was not to shift focus away from the Charles Rennie Mackinosh site, but rather to encase and shield it—as a precious artefact might be both exhibited and preserved within a display cabinet in a history museum. Though, their proposition for a temporary museum was far more interconnected with the landscape and the very essence of the site in the present.
A delicate, transparent box like enclosure made of






Highgate House.
Highgate House // For this London family home near Highgate Wood, Carmody Groarke decided to use
Rectory Farm.
Rectory Farm in Hounslow // Rectory Farm may be one of Carmody Groarke’s most ‘outside the box’ projects to date. A part of London’s Green Belt, the 44-acre, arrow-shaped plot of land near Heathrow Airport fell into disuse in 1996. Over the next decade, the firm will transform the farm into a vast public park – but also a minimum mineral reserve as set out by the London Plan.
Miraculously, the park will remain open and accessible during mineral extraction. The mineral extraction will take place discreetly beneath the park’s surface through an innovative ‘top-down’ construction method, whereby the process is contained below ground. And after the gravel is excavated, Carmody Groarke will leave a 180,000 sqm concrete basement beneath the park – a subterranean lettable warehouse space, which will provide for the upkeep of the park.
Park Hill Art Space in Sheffield.
Park Hill Art Space // Built in Sheffield between 1957 and 1961, Park Hill housing estate was one of the largest council owned estates in the UK. At the time, it was a visionary concept – with several angular slab blocks forming ‘streets in the sky’. After being totally vacated by the mid-1990s, it was granted Grade II Listed status and remains to be Europe’s largest
Now, Park Hill is being reinvented as public and private housing – and a major new international arts venue titled S1 Artspace. Carmody Groarke’s idea to shape 7,200 sqm into a purpose built
The Filling Station, conversion of a derelict petrol station in King’s Cross in 2012.
The Filling Station // So many of Carmody Groarke’s projects are a lesson in the most authentic place-making – like S1 Artspace and Rectory Farm, The Filling Station in London’s King’s Cross brought life to a forgotten and abandoned slice of the UK. Essentially, the firm converted an old petrol station into a new, temporary external public events space and diner-style restaurant, overlooking the Regent’s Canal.
Designed to be a place holder for a new mixed use development, it was more like the sort of regeneration you might witness in Berlin. It was hugely popular and turned over a profit, hosting performances, exhibitions, lectures, and artistic collaborations. Like Highgate House, The Filling Station referenced the site’s post-industrial past, but also suggested alternative ways of inhabiting and participating in a city, and alluded to the future use of the site.
Words by
Images from Kevin Carmody’s ‘Territory of Architecture’ lecture held at Bricksworks Sydney Studio. Brickworks International Speaker Series is curted by Sydney-based architect, speaker, writer and advisor, Stephen Varady.
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[Images courtesy of
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