Art & Culture
Winning Pews & Perches Designs installed across the Royal Docks
The Royal Docks Team is excited to announce the installation of six new bespoke public benches, the final set of winning designs from this year’s Pews and Perches design competition.
From recycled waste concrete to repurposed sugar byproduct, the benches span the practical to the poetic, creatively transforming materials into functional art and engaging with the heritage and landscape of the Royal Docks.
The competition, now in it’s fifth and final year, is a unique collaboration between the Royal Docks Team and the London Festival of Architecture to support emerging talent to break into the built environment industry. In total 25 benches have been delivered across the Royal Docks over the 5-year arc of the competition since 2018, with 9 benches from past years still in situ, and an additional 6 added this year. Every year the project has elevated students, recent graduates and emerging practitioners, often earning them their first commissions.
...We are excited to see how these remarkable benches will continue to inspire and contribute to a more sustainable future for the Royal Docks and London as a whole.
Dan Bridge, Programme Director, Royal Docks Team
This year’s brief called for designers to deliver benches that explore ways to repurpose materials and take inspiration from the Royal Docks, its proximity to the water and the communities who live here. All the winning designs respond to the Mayor’s vision of London transitioning to a circular economy set out in the draft London Plan earlier this year. The designs creatively embrace, explore and test innovative approaches, rethinking ‘waste’ as ‘resource’, while reflecting on the story of the Royal Docks - past, present and future.
Architects from one design team worked with students at London Design & Engineering University Technical College (LDEUTC) to design a tile that responded to the question: “What do you want for the future of your local area?” While another of this year’s designers ran workshops with local community groups to record their memories of the area in a clay tile, to be displayed upon the bench as a public gallery.
The winning teams also had the opportunity to gain extra and advice and support through the LFA mentor programme. This year Tom Kendall from Wayward is an LFA mentor who has a huge amount of experience delivering public realm projects across London and will be on hand to guide this year’s designers as they develop and install their visions.
Dan Bridge, Programme Director, Royal Docks Team said: “The Royal Docks Team, in partnership with the London Festival of Architecture, is delighted to unveil the fifth and final edition of the Pews and Perches design competition. Over the past five years, 25 unique benches have been installed across the Royal Docks, celebrating emerging architectural talent whilst championing sustainability within the built environment. These benches have transformed the spaces they occupy, telling stories of the area’s distinct heritage and regeneration and connecting people with the places around them.
At a time of climate crisis, it is more important than ever that we seek solutions which reduce waste and embrace the principles of a circular economy. This year’s cohort embody this ambition, demonstrating what is possible when the creative and functional combine.
As we conclude this journey, we are excited to see how these remarkable benches will continue to inspire and contribute to a more sustainable future for the Royal Docks and London as a whole.”
Benjamin O’Connor, Director, NLA said: “We are delighted to reveal the latest iteration of Pews and Perches around the Royal Docks for LFA2024. The competition has provided more than 25 young and emerging designers with a platform to showcase their forward-thinking and original designs on a global stage. This has been possible thanks to the innovative and successful partnership between the London Festival of Architecture and the Royal Docks Team over the past 5 years and we are grateful to them for helping to drive LFA’s mission to encourage and support a wide breadth of young talent.”
The winning designs and locations:
66CO2
By Panta Rhei Collaborative x Miles Dean
Location: Pump House, Royal Victoria
With support from the Wellcome Trust and LB Newham
66C02 reuses concrete - often given a bad name for its ecological footprint - in different forms and densities, all repurposed from existing construction sites and championing the material’s structural, functional and sculptural qualities past its first life.
On the Cobbles
By Poacea
Location: North Woolwich Road
With support from Forest Recycling Project
Taking inspiration from the Royal Docks' history as a thriving trade hub, steel-banded timber crates are dropped on the promenade to provide a place for passers-by to rest and ruminate.
Submarine Cables
By Studio Green
Location: Floating Gardens
With support from Benchmark Design
Constructed from rope using traditional rigging knots, the bench’s wave-like form reference’s Silvertown’s history manufacturing submarine cables - large insulated wires laid across sea-bed connecting distant continents and countries.
From Trash to Treasure
By Katie Fisher and Siraaj Mitha
Location: UEL/LDEUTC, Royal Albert Dock
With support from Müll, Sustainable Design Studio and UEL
Exploring creative and playful ways of reinterpreting waste materials, From Trash to Treasure is adorned with timber tiles that share the opinions of young people living in the area, gathered in a workshop with students at UTC.
Now is the Time to Moor Off
By Studio_Underbar
Location: Connaught Crossing North
With support from the LAB-083, Tate & Lyle and Raya Groceries
By repurposing sugar byproduct into functional public seating, Now is the Time to Moor Off sparks a dialogue between the past and present, while also reaching towards a speculative future that embraces the principles of the circular economy.
The Flow Bench
By North-Bound Collective
Location: Connaught Crossing South
With support from HFM Architects, justfacades and Michelmersh
Paying tribute to the history of the Docks, The Flow Bench is a storytelling hub that re-connects residents with their local area and champions sustainability in its materiality and ethos.
Want to find out more about the designers? Check out our article from late 2023 where we selected the winning design teams.