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| Motto | Design with Beauty, Build in Truth |
|---|---|
| Type | Independent |
| Established | 1847; 178 years ago (1847) |
| President | Catherine du Toit |
| Director | Ingrid Schroder (from August 2022) |
| Undergraduates | 562 (2023)[1] |
| Postgraduates | 361 (2023)[1] |
| Location | London (main) , |
| Website | aaschool |
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TheArchitectural Association School of Architecture inLondon, commonly referred to as theAA, is the oldest private school ofarchitecture in the UK.[2][3][4][5][6] The AA hosts exhibitions, lectures,symposia and publications.
The Architectural Association was founded in 1847 as an alternative to the practice of training young men viaapprenticeship to establishedarchitects. Apprenticeships offered no guarantee of educational quality or professional standards, and the system was believed to be "rife withvested interests and open to abuse, dishonesty and incompetence".[7]
Two articled pupils,Robert Kerr (1823–1904) and Charles Gray (1827/28–1881), proposed a systematic course of training provided by the students themselves.[7]Following a merger with the Association of Architectural Draughtsmen, the first formal meeting under the name of the Architectural Association took place in May 1847 atLyons Inn Hall,London.[8] Kerr became the first president (1847–48).[9] From 1859, the AA shared premises at 9Conduit Street with theRoyal Institute of British Architects,[7] later (1891) renting rooms inGreat Marlborough Street.[7]

The AA School was formally established in 1890, and in 1901, it moved to the formerRoyal Architectural Museum in Tufton Street, Westminster. In 1917, it moved to its current location inBedford Square, central London, and has since acquired additional London premises in John Street, a property on Morwell Street behind Bedford Square,[10] and a 350-acre (1.4 km2) site atHooke Park in Dorset.
Historically, students of the AA have been addressed byJohn Ruskin andGeorge Gilbert Scott in the 19th century, and, more recently, byRichard Rogers,Zaha Hadid,Rem Koolhaas,Denise Scott Brown, andDavid Chipperfield, an alumnus of the school.[citation needed]
Women were first admitted as students to the AA School duringWorld War I in 1917,[11] almost 20 years after the RIBA had admitted its first female member,Ethel Charles, who, with her sisterBessie, had been refused entry to the AA school in 1893.[12]Ruth Gollancz,[13]Winifred Ryle, Irene Graves andGillian Harrison (nee Cooke) were some of the first women to enter the AA,[14] hitherto a solely male school.[14]
In the postWorld War II period, several women architects, writers, and journalists attended courses ("classes and sets") at the AA, including Su Brumwell (Susan Miller / Rogers), Eldred Evans, Margot Griffin, Zaha Hadid, Patti Hopkins, Samantha Hardingham, Sally Mackereth, Mya Anastasia Manakides, Janet Street-Porter, Carolyn Trevor, Susan Wheeler and Georgie Walton.[citation needed]
The position of women at the AA was highlighted and investigated during a year-long programme of celebration in 2017,AAXX, marking the centenary of the first women's entry to the school. A book,AA Women in Architecture 1917–2017, edited by Elizabeth Darling and Lynne Walker, was published.[15]
Courses are divided into two main areas: undergraduate programmes, leading to the AA Diploma (RIBA/ARB Part 2), and postgraduate programmes, which include specialised courses in Landscape Urbanism,[16] Housing and Urbanism, Sustainable Environmental Design, Histories and Theories, Emergent Technologies,[17] and Design Research Lab. Other programmes include Projective Cities, Design + Make, and Interprofessional studio. Since its foundation, the school has continued to draw its teaching staff from progressive international practices. Teaching staff are reappointed annually, allowing a continual renewal of the exploration of architectural graphics and polemical formalism.[18]
The school sits outside the state-funded university system andUCAS application system. As an independent school, the AA does not participate in university rankings.
The AA enrolls a higher proportion of students from overseas compared to other architecture schools in the UK.[19]
The AA Bookshop has a collection of architectural literature[20] and is a platform for AA's own publications.[21] AA Publications has a tradition of publishing architects, artists and theorists early in their careers, as well as occasionally publishing figures who have already gained renown in other fields of expertise, such asSalman Rushdie. AA Publications produces the journal,AA Files, and the AA Book, known as theProjects Review, which annually documents the work undertaken by members of the school from Foundation to Graduate programmes. AA publications are designed and edited by theAA Print Studio, originally established in 1971 as part of the Communications Unit directed byDennis Crompton ofArchigram.[22] The school formerly had its own independent radio station.[23]
The AA has a unique democratic structure where staff and students elect a director and a majority of the members of the governing board.
In November 2017, the AA reportedly planned to make 16 staff redundant, including the whole of its publications and exhibitions departments.[24] Shortly before, the AA had announced it was seeking a new director, to be appointed by March 2018,[25] following the departure of Brett Steele announced in December 2016.[26][27]
The first female director of the AA wasEva Franch i Gilabert, appointed in 2018[28] (succeeding interim director Samantha Hardingham). Following votes of no confidence in her leadership,[29][30] Franch was fired in July 2020 for "failure to develop and implement a strategy and maintain the confidence of the AA School Community, which were specific failures of performance against clear objectives outlined in the original contract of employment."[31] Her dismissal came despite support from academics who wrote an open letter talking of "systemic biases" against women and ofsexism, and accusing the AA of using "thepandemic for anti-democratic purposes".[30] Architectural magazineDezeen reported that tutor and alumni views indicated that the failure to investigate allegations of bullying and sexism had damaged both the AA school and the architecture profession, leaving "a cloud over the school".[32] The AA began seeking a successor to Franch in December 2021,[33] shortlisting candidates in March 2022.[34] In May 2022, the school announced Ingrid Schroder would be its new director from August 2022.[35]
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