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In our practice of architecture we have assembled a portfolio of key projects in Wales that employ a number of methods that add up to a distinctive process of design. This has lead to a particular architectural language or at least dialect. These methods are not codified or set out in a design manual but are a shared way of doing things that have emerged from a process of teaching, learning and practice. The process / processes are rooted in observation, experience, building visits, reflective notebooks, dreams, conversations in cars and arguments in corridors, precedent studies, full size prototypes and laboratory work and are represented as conceptual diagrams, ideograms, material studies and constructions, through to detail studies in drawn and modelled form.
This kind of design output is rarely presented to the general public or even clients or cognate disciplines but can reveal much about the architect’s skills.