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AJ CLIMATE CHAMPIONS: EPISODE 24

AJ Climate Champions podcast: Marina Tabassum on why climate crisis isn’t a geographic problem

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Bangladeshi architect and 2021 Soane Medal winner Marina Tabassum describes her approach as distilling the essence of vernacular buildings into contemporary architecture

In this episode, we hear from Marina Tabassum who is working on the front line of climate change in the Ganges delta, developing flat pack bamboo homes to bolster marginal communities devastated by seasonal flooding.  ‘How relevant are we as a profession if we just cater our services to one per cent of the people?’ Tabassum asks.

Tabassum was recently short-listed in the London School of Economics’ competition for an academic building at 35 Lincoln’s Inn Fields as part of a team led John McAslan + Partners with Tod Williams/Billie Tsien Architects.

To catch up on all AJ Climate Champions episodes, click here.


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About Marina Tabassum

Winner of the Aga Khan medal in 2016 for her Bait ur Rouf Mosque, Marina Tabassum runs her practice, Marina Tabussum Architects, in Dhaka. After teaching at Harvard and in Texas, Marina now teaches at TU Delft and directs the Bengal Institute for Architecture, Landscapes and Settlements.  In 2021, in addition to the Soane Medal, she was awarded the Gold Medal by the French Academy of Architecture, the Arnold W. Bruner Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and named a Royal Designer for Industry by the RSA.

Her current work includes 100 modular bamboo houses in the Ganges delta supported by a Swiss government grant. She also has eight projects underway in and around the Rohingya refugee camps near Cox’s Bazar in southeast Bangladesh near the Myanmar border, as well as two high-end residential projects in Dhaka.

Baharchara Aggregation Center, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Photographer: Asif Salman

Show notes: Projects and resources mentioned in this episode

Soane Medal lecture

Bait ur Rouf Mosque (2012)

Marina Tabassum Architects

NEK-10 house (2001)

A5 Residence (2001)

TU Delft Visiting Professor Marina Tabassum

Inheriting Wetness Sharjah Triennial 2019

Khudi Bari

Teesta River Barrage

From L-R: Khudi Bari. Modular mobile house for the climate victims of Bangladesh, 2020 Photo: Asif Salman / Resilient Landscape, Rohingya Refugee Camps, Ukhiya. Photo: F. M. Faruque Abdullah Shawon / Baharchara Aggregation Center. Photographer: MTA Team / Bait ur Rouf Mosque Faidabad, Uttara, Dhaka. Photos by: Sandro Di Carlo Darsa (x2) and Hasan Saifuddin Chandan

Credits

Climate Champions is produced in association with ACAN, the Architects’ Climate Action Network
Podcast produced and edited by Concept Culture
Music: Edmilson do Pífano, Forró de dois Amigos. Interpretation: Felipe Tanaka e banda Balaio de Baião

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