Design Buy Build Issue 35 2018 | Page 16

An Interview with astudio founder Richard Hyams by Antony Holter 1:- Over the past couple of years we have seen a huge increase from Architects taking the modular approach. Why do you think that people are now taking this approach more so than ever before? The industry as a whole is seeing a lot of cost pressure. Construction is becoming more expensive across resources, skills and materials with shortages everywhere. Just last year there was a brick shortage, for example. There has been a reluctance, up until now, among architects towards modular because many architects used to believe it limited creativity, skills and design. We don’t believe that. We believe that because there are myriad ways to use modular - from big volume builds right down to smaller projects - that you have to be more creative, partly because you are using bigger components. In fact, it demands more skill to work with these larger building elements. It demands more of an architect, not less. But one of the main drivers of increased interest is obviously that the government is investing in it. When the government invests people tend to listen. So, there’s a drive towards it. If there is funding things will happen. 2:- Obviously with Astudio having an in-house environmental engineer the environment and the sustainability involved in each project must be something that is key to each project. Is this something that must always be a key focus for you when you take on each project? To put it simply, yes. The whole point of us having an environmental engineer in house is so that from the first design we have a strategy for limiting carbon and energy use. It’s part of our design, so it’s embedded in what we do. 16