Skip to main content
Navigate back to homepage
Open search bar.
Open main navigation menu

Main navigation

  • Study
    Study at UCL

    Being a student at UCL is about so much more than just acquiring knowledge. Studying here gives you the opportunity to realise your potential as an individual, and the skills and tools to thrive.

    • Undergraduate courses
    • Graduate courses
    • Short courses
    • Study abroad
    • Centre for Languages & International Education
  • Research
    Tree-of-Life-MehmetDavrandi-UCL-EastmanDentalInstitute-042_2017-18-800x500-withborder (1)
    Research at UCL

    Find out more about what makes UCL research world-leading, how to access UCL expertise, and teams in the Office of the Vice-Provost (Research, Innovation and Global Engagement).

    • Engage with us
    • Explore our Research
    • Initiatives and networks
    • Research news
  • Engage
    UCL Print room
    Engage with UCL

    Discover the many ways you can connect with UCL, and how we work with industry, government and not-for-profit organisations to tackle tough challenges.

    • Alumni
    • Business partnerships and collaboration
    • Global engagement
    • News and Media relations
    • Public Policy
    • Schools and priority groups
    • Give to UCL
  • About
    UCL welcome quad
    About UCL

    Founded in 1826 in the heart of London, UCL is London's leading multidisciplinary university, with more than 16,000 staff and 50,000 students from 150 different countries.

    • Who we are
    • Faculties
    • Governance
    • President and Provost
    • Strategy
  • Active parent page: UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment
    • Study
    • Research
    • Our schools and institutes
    • People
    • Ideas
    • Engage
    • Active parent page: News and Events
    • About

Bartlett researchers shortlisted for the 2016 RIBA Research Award

Tagliero

Breadcrumb trail

  • UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment
  • News and Events

Faculty menu

  • Current page: News
  • Events

Shortly after it was announced that Bartlett Design PhD candidate Judit Ferencz had won this year’s RIBA LKE Ozolin Studentship with 'The Graphic Novel as an Interdisciplinary Conservation Method in Architectural Heritage', four members of The Bartlett were shortlisted for the RIBA Research Award.

The RIBA Research Award is an annual celebration of the best research in the fields of Architecture and the Built Environment. This year's award was aimed at broadening participation within the Built Environment through emphasising the interdisciplinary nature of architectural research.

Bartlett Teaching Fellow Edward Denison worked with the Asmara Heritage Project for his research on Africa’s Modernist City: UNESCO World Heritage Nomination. The research combines past and present photographs to convey the life of a building in Eritrea's capital city over time. Asmara provides a unique example of a colonial city facing modernity and postcolonial struggles. In seeking to redress the under-representation of African and modernist sites on the World Heritage List, Denison's research challenges traditional perceptions of colonial heritage and modernism in order to move beyond a Eurocentric gaze.

Bartlett Tutor David Roberts’ entry, Make Public: Performing Public Housing in Ernö Goldfinger’s Balfron Tower, is based on his PhD thesis looking at the history and future of east London housing estates undergoing regeneration. Central to his research into 1965-7 Balfron Tower was engagement with current and former residents through a series of workshops to build collective knowledge, and activism which draws on this material and evidence to contribute to a more informed public debate and planning decisions.

Roberts developed an interactive online archive and a successful application to list Balfron Tower at Grade II* which explicitly recognises Goldfinger’s social ideals and Balfron’s social purpose as a key component of its heritage. In doing so, he advanced an argument that the practice and guidance of heritage of post-war housing estates must not only pay tribute to the egalitarian principles at their foundations, it must enact them.

The entry, ‘Spotless Lilies and Foul Smelling Weeds’: Architecture and Moral Cleanliness in Victorian Magdalene Convents’ by former Bartlett PhD student Kate Jordan was also shortlisted. The research focuses on religious houses in Britain since the Catholic Emancipation of 1829 – an area largely overlooked by architectural historians.  In looking at ‘nuns as designers and builders’, Jordan’s work on Magdalene convents present both the historical and contemporary voice of women who have come to shape the design of religious buildings. Her research combines theology, architectural design and cultural history to present a new understanding of women in the built environment.

Finally, Bartlett Professor Murray Fraser has collaborated with Dr Nasser Golzari and Dr Yara Sharif on their entry Palestine Regeneration. In pushing urban and sustainable design through a close engagement with community groups and everyday cultural practices in Palestine, the project uses ‘social mapping’ to explore conflict and cultural identity. Focusing on the principles of ‘stitching’ and ‘empowering’, the project examines ways in which architecture and urban design can be used to repair the landscape of Palestine/Israel.

The winner will be announced in early December.

Content is empty

UCL footer

Visit

  • Bloomsbury Theatre and Studio
  • Library, Museums and Collections
  • UCL Maps
  • UCL Shop
  • Contact UCL

Students

  • Accommodation
  • Current Students
  • Moodle
  • Students' Union

Staff

  • Inside UCL
  • Staff Intranet
  • Work at UCL
  • Human Resources

UCL social media menu

  • Link to Instagram
  • Link to LinkedIn
  • Link to Youtube
  • Link to TikTok
  • Link to Facebook
  • Link to Bluesky
  • Link to Threads
  • Link to Soundcloud

University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT

Tel: +44 (0) 20 7679 2000

© 2025 UCL

Essential

  • Disclaimer
  • Freedom of Information
  • Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • Slavery statement
  • Log in