RIBA Norman Foster Travelling Scholarship winner Thomas Warren will apply lessons from off-grid African cities
This year’s RIBA Norman Foster Travelling Scholarship winner will travel to Africa for a documentation of off-grid living communities in the hopes of establishing a new model of self-sustaining food, water, and energy systems. Thomas Warren of London Metropolitan University won the £7,000 ($9,000 USD) grant for his project ‘Africa 360°’, which will begin and end in Cape Town, South Africa. RIBA says: “Thomas intends to use the travel scholarship to investigate how future off-grid cities can eliminate the time consuming, costly, and maintenance-heavy nature of city scale infrastructure." The Class of 2024 MArch graduate was supposedly inspired by the foresight of certain countries to leapfrog telecommunications and other technologies. The Earthship Biotecture project in Malawi and Irente Biodiversity Reserve in Tanzania are two of the five projects Warren mentioned as visiting to glean lessons that can be applied to the design of future cities everywhere.Read the full post on Bustler
This year’s RIBA Norman Foster Travelling Scholarship winner will travel to Africa for a documentation of off-grid living communities in the hopes of establishing a new model of self-sustaining food, water, and energy systems.
Thomas Warren of London Metropolitan University won the £7,000 ($9,000 USD) grant for his project ‘Africa 360°’, which will begin and end in Cape Town, South Africa. RIBA says: “Thomas intends to use the travel scholarship to investigate how future off-grid cities can eliminate the time consuming, costly, and maintenance-heavy nature of city scale infrastructure."
The Class of 2024 MArch graduate was supposedly inspired by the foresight of certain countries to leapfrog telecommunications and other technologies. The Earthship Biotecture project in Malawi and Irente Biodiversity Reserve in Tanzania are two of the five projects Warren mentioned as visiting to glean lessons that can be applied to the design of future cities everywhere.
Read the full post on Bustler