Build Build Build; but don’t build like before

Build Build Build; but don’t build like before

Trudi Beswick, Champion for Disabled Children & Families,  CEO - Caudwell Children, Board Member – Design In Mental Health Network, Steering Group Member - The British Standards Institution

With Prime Minister, Boris Johnson announcing “the most radical reforms to our planning system since the Second World War” and rallying the UK to #BuildBuildBuild,

I am calling on Government and the construction industry to use this opportunity to re-consider exactly who they are building for. 

Our understanding of the world has changed, it’s time for our buildings to catch up.

 Across all sectors, all industry, all walks of life, people are questioning what they want to retain from our pre-COVID19 world and what we want to change.

The opportunity to re-think and reset how we work and live may only come around once in a generation so we must seize the opportunity and ensure that positive change is born from the ashes of such catastrophic disruption and tragedy.

Each of us, in whatever field we work, has the ability to reassess what we do and question whether it was really fit for purpose for our modern world.

Building regulations born from the 1995 and 2005 revision of the Disability Discrimination Act (where effectively employed) only serve to improve accessibility for people with different mobility and vision needs. 

Our improved understanding of the wider spectrum of accessibility must now be considered, to make our buildings more inclusive and to increase society’s understanding and accepting or all our differences.

 15% of the UK population are neurodivergent, meaning that the brain functions, learns and processes information differently. Neurodivergence includes Attention Deficit Disorders, Autism, Dyslexia and Dyspraxia.      
https://archive.acas.org.uk/neurodiversity 

 These, along with the wider spectrum of neurological conditions including epilepsy, dementia and Parkinson’s, are not currently considered with existing Building Regulations.   

 Hence, the vast majority of buildings and built environments in the UK, and around the world, do not cater for a neurodiverse population.

Built environments that fail to consider the sensory experience for a neurodiverse population also fail in creating truly accessible environments for everyone to use and enjoy, a defining principle of accessible design and the hallmark of quality architecture.

Six years ago I started the design and construction of the Caudwell International Children’s Centre, a 60,000sqft purpose-built facility for the provision of support services for disabled children, including autism assessments and interventions.

As I do with every project, I placed stakeholder engagement at the very heart of the decision-making, routinely seeking direct input from a diverse group of the building’s potential users to understand their needs and requirements.

Children and young people provide feedback on building designs

The feedback we received from those stakeholder groups presented us with our key design principles and directly informed design decisions throughout the construction of the innovative new building.

Ultimately, this process led to the creation of the UK’s first purpose-built, independent facility for the assessment, intervention and research of neurodevelopmental conditions, including autism.

The completed project, which officially launched in May 2019, has also been recognised for its innovative approach to the design process by winning (among others) the RICS National and Regional Project of the Year, Design in Mental Health Project of the Year and the Charity Times Property Innovation Award.

Trudi Beswick, John Caudwell and the Design Team recieving the RICS Project of the Year Award 2019

But recognition for our project should and will only be the beginning, it is my mission to influence and motivate the wider construction industry to follow examples of best-practice within the industry and adopt the same principles of stakeholder engagement and a broader approach to accessibility.

Understanding, accepting and embracing all the wonderful diversity within our society will make stronger communities, more effective businesses and a healthier society.

Now is the moment to ensure the legacy of COVID-19 is a legacy for all, a legacy that sets the bar for accessibility around the world.

To join me on this mission please share this call for support as widely as possible and help spread the word before the walls start going up…and shutting people out.   

To discuss how you can support this call for action please contact me on [email protected] or follow me on Twitter @trudibeswick

#COVID19 #buildbuildbuild #caudwellchildren #charity #accessibility #neurodiversity #construction #building #borisjohnson #infrastructure



 

Brian Cox

Risk & Resilience Lead - Saving Nature Managing Risk; ex Financial Planning & Retirement Transformation Change Risk Lead; Pensions Specialist & Commentator ; Charity Trustee; Age Inclusion Advocate

4 年

An initiative to be admired Trudi. Having been a carer myself and having association with those involved with people with varied special needs, I have utmost sympathy. DDA may have brought some intent, but momentum maintained has been very variable. The building industry and particularly large-scale builders suffer from a ‘build big, tall and close together’ production line mentality, designed to maximise profit from land. The scarcity of single story dwellings is fine proof of that and how the culture needs to change to allow widest accessibility. Don’t even ask a major builder to vary a basic design, it’s off the shelf or nothing. Bespoke options are better, but accessing those providers and the availability of land, at an appropriate and consistent price is challenging. It’s time customer needs were listened to in the construction industry.

Gillian Farrell

Art Consultant with DeMontfort Fine Art - Atelier

4 年

In our inclusive society our standard building design should and must accommodate 'hidden disabilities' instead of being forgotten and overlooked. We must champion change for adaptive spaces fit for all mankind and our planet. Collaboration is key.

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