CAA DHAKA th GENERAL ASSEMBLY AND CONFERENCE February 19 - February 24

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20th GENERAL ASSEMBLY AND CONFERENCE February 19 - February 24 REPORT Contents 20th General Assembly Delegates, Observers and Guests Assembly Photograph Council 2013-2016 Conference Tour

20th GENERAL ASSEMBLY 2010-13 SESSION REPORTING There was much achieved towards the objectives set at the 19 th GA in Sri Lanka; financial policies were implemented to good effect although income remained an ultimate constraint on activity. Membership An objective of Mubasshar Hussain s Presidency was to increase membership and the human network of CAA. he opened the meeting noting that Pakistan and Singapore, both founder members of CAA, had rejoined. The new Institute of Architects in Rwanda, which joined the Commonwealth in 2009, was accepted for membership at the 68 th Council meeting (held immediately preceding the Assembly) their primary interest being validation for the new architecture course at Kigali Institute of Science and Technology. The difficult matter of the UK s reduced subscription contribution, following the abrupt onset of recession in 2009, was resolved with settlement of arrears and a return to full subscription contribution for 2012. Perhaps more important though was the renewal of the RIBA s corporate commitment to membership manifest in their proposals to the GA for making the organisation more effective. Although the 8 suspended members were cause for concern all other 23 members, with one exception, had paid their 2012 subscription. Finance The deficits of the previous session were halted and the policy reserve of 30000 re-established at the end of 2011. Demands on subscription income were reduced in line with the agreed objective of self-funding for activities but the risk of dependence on large subscription contributions made clear the continuing need for diversity of income sources. Validation charges were introduced in 2011 with no fall off in demand but these had only covered 65% of direct visit or agreement costs. This left an average of 12K per annum subsidised by subscription income. The WISE Student Competition had achieved 50% cost recovery. An 8000 grant was secured from the Commonwealth Foundation for the year 2012-13 including 4000 for the Dhaka conference though changes in criteria made this income stream less certain. It was noted that the estimated value of contributions of voluntary professional time would increase CAA s income threefold. Activities Practice activity had been limited to supporting national Sustainability seminars and conferences, assisted by the Commonwealth Foundation grant, but CAA Validation work had continued strengthened by improved procedures. I cannot stress enough the impact and influence of our validation work on standards in architectural education Tony Godwin stated in his Executive Director s report to the GA. CAA s membership of the Canberra Accord advanced a founding ambition of the CAA validation system, the mutual recognition of qualifications, and the CAA system would be subject to peer review by the Accord in 2014. The 9 th International Student Competition for the design of Welcoming Inclusive Spaces for the Elderly, with online submission for the first time, had been a huge success attracting 126 entries from 32 nationalities from 41 schools in 24 countries (see www.wisecompetition.org and April 2013 Issue of the Architectural Review). This was due in no small measure to the hosting of the jury by the Bangladesh Institute of Architects who had further arranged an exhibition in parallel with the conference which the winners attended. Governance The constitutional review, probably the most comprehensive since CAA was founded, had been ably steered by the Vice President Europe, Vincent Cassar (Malta). However input from members to the proposal for amendment, including that from the RIBA proposing a new governance structure to comply with UK charity law, required more consideration by Council, Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 2

RESOLUTIONS FOR THE 2013-2016 SESSION Against this backdrop the GA the delegates from 17 countries, including more women than before (6 compared with 1 at the 19 th GA), set out to chart the way forward. Discussion was positive and focused with clarity and consensus about how to strengthen the organisation to achieve output rather than considering new initiatives. Three resolutions commissioned task groups anchored by Council members to consider matters of organisation and certain activities and to report back with recommendations within set time frames; Constitution; to consider the further proposals for amendment submitted by members, including alternative membership and governance models if appropriate. (Recommendations to Council by 31 October 2013) Subscriptions; to review the basis for calculating subscriptions considering value for money and impact on member commitment and participation (Report to Council by 31 October 2013) Activities; to formulate action plans for the following activities and incorporate these into a strategic plan with those on the Draft Work Programme 2013 for (electronic) approval by the GA (31st May 2013); Advocacy Partners for projects (P4P) Online resource centre; sharing and providing CPD courses Networking of members and their activities Financial Plan; review the budget for the session to provide for all activities. A resolution brought by the VP Americas (elect) Wycliffe Morton (St Kitts and Nevis) was also passed to urge governments in the Americas region to implement legislation for registration of the profession in countries where this does already exist. Outline proposals from the RIBA for the hosting of the 50 th Anniversary General Assembly and Conference in London and a provision time of late June 2016 were accepted. The RIBA was requested to submit a formal bid by end of May 2013. In his incoming address the new President, Rukshan Widyalankara, stated, CAA s success lies in diversity of membership and shared culture, creating a unique position from which to contribute to solving global built environment problems. CAA has come of age as a force to be reckoned with in accreditation but needs renewal to address the contemporary needs of its members. He set out the following objectives to guide his presidency; Institutional Excellence Member Outreach Embrace Technology Capacity Improvement Sustainable Growth In closing he urged the support of all members to achieve these. We re in this together. he concluded. Tony Godwin Executive Director Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 3

DELEGATES Shelley Penn President Australian Institute of Architects Jalal Ahmed Honorary Secretary Institute of Architects Bangladesh Sithabile Mathe Council member Architects Association of Botswana Christos Panayiotides Member Cyprus Civil Engineers and Architects Association Ada Fung President Hong Kong Institute of Architects Ann Hodges Member Jamaica Institute of Architects Steven Oundo Chair Architects Association of Kenya Vincent Cassar Chair Kamra Tal-Periti Sophia van Greunen Member Namibian Institute of Architects John Sinclair Past President New Zealand Institute of Architects Mansur Kurfi Ahmadu Chair of Education Nigerian Institute of Architects Jahangir Kahn President Institute of Architects Pakistan Ashvin Kumar Kantial Imm. Past President Singapore Institute of Architects Chandana Edirisuriya Imm. Past President Sri Lanka Institute of Architects Wycliffe Morton President St Kitts and Nevis Institute of Architects Kenneth Ssemwogerere President Uganda Society of Architects Annette Fisher Council member Royal Institute of British Architects OBSERVERS Arif Changezi Honorary Secretary, Institute of Architects, Pakistan Syed Akeel Bilgrami Past President Institute of Architects, Pakistan Shahab Ghani Khan Honorary Secretary, Imm. Institute of Architects, Pakistan Past President Kazi Golam Nasir President Affairs Institute of Architects, Bangladesh David Sheppard President, New Zealand Institute of Architects Rosman Wai Chair Board of Educational Hong Kong Institute of Architects Affairs Abu Hena Zipuddin Member Institute of Architects, Bangladesh GUESTS Louise Cox (Australia) Imm. Past President International Union of Architects George Henderson (UK) Past President 1997-2000 CAA Phillip Kungu (Kenya) President 2000-2003 CAA Balbir Verma (India) Practice Chair 2007-2010 CAA Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 4

ASSEMBLY PHOTOGRAPH Right to left; Arif Changezi, Ishtiaque Titas (Member Secretary IAB OC), Shahab Ghani Kahn, Shelley Penn, Mansur Kurfi Ahmadu, Jayantha Perera, Balbir Verma, Tony Godwin, Kenneth Ssemwogerere, Wycliffe Morton, A Ismail (Convener IAB OC), George Henderson, Kazi Golam Nasir, Louise Cox, Chandana Edirisuriya, Ada Fung, Rukshan Widyalankara, Rosman Wai, Steven Oundo Sophia van Greunen, Mubasshar Hussain, David Parken, Sithabile Mathe, Jahangir Khan, John Geeson, Ann Hodges, Vincent Cassar, Gordon Holden, Ashvin Kumar Kantial, John Sinclair, Annette Fisher, Jalal Ahmed, Syed Akeel Bilgrami, Abu Hena Zipuddin, Christos Panayiotides, David Sheppard (IAB OC = Institute of Architects Bangladesh, Dhaka 2013 Organising Committee) CAA COUNCIL 2013-2016 President (Officer). Rukshan Widyalankara (Sri Lanka) rukshan@rwpldesign.com Immediate Past President. Mubasshar Hussain (Bangladesh) caa.bangladesh@gmail.com Senior Vice President. Vincent Cassar (Malta) vincass@maltanet.net Honorary Secretary/Treasurer (Officer). John Geeson UK john.geeson@haskoll.co.uk Education Committee Chair of Education. Mansur Ahmadu (Nigeria) mansurkurfi@yahoo.com Practice Committee Chair of Practice. Steven Oundo (Kenya) oundosteven@gmail.com Communication Committee Chair of Communications. Jayantha Perera (Sri Lanka) jayap52@yahoo.com Regional Vice Presidents Africa. Sithabile Matthe (Botswana) moralo@broadpark.no Americas. Wycliffe Morgan (St Kitts and Nevis) whmorton@hotmail.com Asia. Kalim Siddiqui (Pakistan) kalim@kalimsiddiquiassociates.com Europe. Christos Panayiotides (Cyprus) cp@cpa.com.cy Oceania. David Parken (Australia) david.parken@raia.com.au (See also Council resumés in document CNLIntroCouncil2013-16.pdf) CAA TRUSTEES Annette Fisher (UK) annette.fisher@fa-global.co.uk John Geeson (UK) john.geeson@haskoll.co.uk George Henderson (UK) george@dghenderson.co.uk Gordon Holden (Australia) g.holden@griffith.edu.au Llewellyn van Wyk (South Africa) lvwyk@csir.co.za Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 5

CONFERENCE Architecture, Response & Responsibility The conference attracted nearly 1000 delegates, including many students (there are now 16 schools of architecture in the country) and 60 international delegates and speakers from 12 commonwealth countries. With the theme that architecture be responsive and architects responsible in the face of the pressing challenges of rapid global change, the organisers gathered a diverse set of speakers, some invited and others selected by a technical committee, using a blind review process following submission of papers. 20 presentations included the visually stunning work of well-known architects as well as the research output of academics and practitioners. The event was further enlivened with photography and architecture exhibitions, including that of the CAA s 9 th International Student Competition, a building exhibition, and the screening of films. David Adjaye OBE (UK), whose keynote address opened the conference, described his projects in progress or completed in locations all over the world including responses to context in his native Ghana and how his design for the Smithsonian Institute s National Museum of African American Culture on the National Mall in Washington DC were influenced by West African art forms. Most remarkable was a small neighbourhood library building, also in Washington, Francis George Library completed by Adjaye in 2012; a transparent, jewel-like box, designed to allow views into and through it to the woodland park behind. Its unconventional appearance expressing a faceted diagonal grid of timber and glass has changed local perceptions of a library. As Adjaye remarked, you know your building is successful when teenagers use it as a place to hang out and go to on a date. Invited presentations from Bangladesh came from Shamsul Wares and Nahas Ahmed Khalil and Kashef Chowdhury. Wares introduced overseas delegates to the architecture of Muzharul Islam, considered to be the pioneer modernist architect of Bangladesh, working in the 1950s onwards. His Faculty of Fine Art building at Dhaka University (1956) is claimed to be the first modern building in Bangladesh. Its simple arrangement and honest expression shaped by programmatic, cultural and climatic concerns still look fresh today. Still in use, keeping alive Bangladeshi arts and craftwork, the building has become a national cultural centre for Bengalis and remains an enduring master-class in climate-responsive architecture. Other invited presentations came from Bijoy Jain (Studio Mumbai, India), Kerry Hill (Singapore), David Sheppard (Sheppard and Rout Architects, New Zealand), Paul Pholeros AM (HealthHabitat, Australia) and Ian Taylor (FCB Studios, UK) Jain and Hill spoke of the making of architecture rooted in context; the former with local knowledge and crafts invoking Soane with his outdoor studio of full scale assemblies and samples. Hill spoke of using private house commissions as a test bed for ideas. In the selected works from his 30 year career one felt that the design generators of time, place and culture were woven into the fabric of their design DNA. It was almost a relief to hear him admit, 'You can't find a reason for everything you make - architecture is a sensual experience'. Taylor was clear that sharing experiences outside one s own cultural and climatic environments in a globalising world leads to greater innovation rather than homogenised solutions. Perhaps more importantly this conference gave a view to a wider collective responsibility for the profession; Advocacy for the built environment, not only by engaging with governments, but through projects demonstrating how improving the built environment can change lives of large numbers of people for the better. The organisers supreme feat of securing Bangladesh s Prime Minister HE Sheik Hasina to open the conference (on a Friday) gave government endorsement and she spoke passionately about the need for architects to address the problems of rapid and unplanned urbanisation (Dhaka s unofficial population is 22 million), urging the profession to widen its remit beyond the design of buildings in pursuit of creating more environmentally-friendly and better-planned cities. Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 6

A number of presentations showed the profession is already alive to the broader needs indicated in the Prime Minister s clarion call and others beyond. David Sheppard (New Zealand) told an extraordinary story of persistent advocacy by local architects in postearthquake Christchurch, New Zealand. Keen to be involved at an early stage with the city s urban future and faced with resistant business and political interest ( Don t worry architects will get their chance when buildings are required ) they collaborated to prepare a document Visions of Opportunity. Yet despite capturing the attention of national Government architects are still not part of the official process. Sophia van Greunen ( Assessing the Resiliance of Windhoek ) discussing the challenges to developing a sustainable plan for the capital of Africa s newest independent state (and one of the most arid) exhorted, We have to get involved at the political level to affect the urban plan in which we create buildings. Paul Pholeros argued for the need to rethink the traditional client base and redefine the scope of architecture to include health and well-being. He reminded the audience that ' poor people have no choices and need our best designs'. Such is the transferable relevance of his work, improving the living conditions of native Australian communities, this has led to consulting work outside Australia including with the office of the Mayor of New York. Facilities such as the Mombasa ferry terminal ( The Influence of Design on the Thermal Environment of Public Transport Transit Facilities, Otieno Koteng and Juma Oino, Kenya) suffered by over 7 million people a year must abound in many locations awaiting the intelligent and holistic attention of the architect. Coincidentally in their General Assembly the previous day CAA members resolved to evaluate the potential of their Association for advocacy and the conference formed an imperative for taking this work forward. The Conference dates overlapped with International Mother Language Day (21 February). This annual holiday in Bangladesh is held in remembrance of those killed in 1952 fighting against the imposition of Urdu as the national language. Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets, many making their way to lay flowers and wreaths at Central Shaheed Minar, which by the end of the day was a vast, colourful tribute to the national heroes who lost their lives. It was a privilege to part of such a unifying national event and to witness the passionate celebration of culture. Yet passion also generates friction and, as we left Dhaka, rallies triggered by the outcome of the trials for war crimes committed during the 1971 War of Liberation became violent. With elections due latest January 2014 this is also a time political change. The conference was only made possible by an organising committee of architects aided by an army of student volunteers; meeting this energetic, committed and intellectual group and others attending the conference made one optimistic for the future of architecture and the country. Tony Godwin and George Henderson Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 7

TOUR Louis Kahn s National Assembly Building For a number of delegates, a visit to the National Assembly building in Dhaka City was an essential component of the conference. Initially designed in 1962 by architect Louis Kahn, his magnum opus was under construction for the next twenty years and went wildly over budget. Khan never saw his design completed, dying eight years before the building was officially opened. If Kahn s monumental landmark was intended to impress, it achieves that ambition. The seven-storey building is a timeless giant with a brooding presence. Placed at the centre of a huge, island of landscaped tranquillity (citizens are now banished from the park and vast shadeless piazza for fear of politically motivated civil disturbance), the National Parliament Complex feels at odds with the real world it administers beyond its high-security gates, where chaos and congestion reign. The vast, spacious interiors seem perversely extravagant, located as they are in one of the poorest and most crowded countries of the world. The circulation spaces looked more like one of Piranesi s etchings of imaginary prisons than the lobby of a modern government building. And in spite of Khan s claim that he was creating a new democracy in the architecture, the strong geometric forms and shapes (NZIA President, David Sheppard, who studied under Kahn at Pennsylvania recalled his office lined with history books from which he drew inspiration for these) make the building seem culturally disconnected from their locus and all the more remarkable that it has become an icon for the new nation. However, if it is possible to set aside all the controversial aspects of Kahn s building (including its exorbitant cost) and to accept that it is an orphan from a previous age, it is difficult to deny that the National Assembly building is a powerful statement and the architecture still has the capacity to move the soul today. George Henderson and Tony Godwin Tel/Fax: +44 1780 238091 Email: admin@comarchitect.org Website: www.comarchitect.org 8