You might not be familiar with Becontree Estate in east London, but when it was completed nearly 100 years ago, it was the largest council estate in the world. Now, in celebration of is centenary, the Royal Institute of British Architects have teamed up with Create London and London Borough of Barking and Dagenham (LBBD) to revamp<\/a> and redesign 12 neglected and underused corner lots located within the estate. Together, they have announced that Squaring the Corners, a proposal by Nimtim Architects ard artist Katie Schwab, has been selected to revive Becontree\u2019s corner plots.<\/p>\n
Ultimately, Nimtim Architects\u2019 Squaring the Corners prevailed.<\/p>\n
\u201cEach square suggests new activities and performs new functions by inviting residents to take ownership of them,\u201d reads the announcement of Squaring the Corners<\/a>. \u201cTheir designs borrow generously from geometries, colours, and materials within the estate \u2013 both in their original and current customised manifestations. With a strong focus on biodiversity, the ambition is to encourage the re-establishment of the original ecosystem of the heath, thus creating a part wild, part intimate public space: much smaller in scale than the large municipal parks, and much more social than the adjacent front gardens.\u201d<\/p>\n
Squaring the Corners will get underway in the spring as part of a year-long programme<\/a> of events, learning, exhibitions, and commissions, both artistic and architectural, to celebrate the milestone for Becontree.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"