Doug Clelland (original) (raw)

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Architect and author

Douglas Jarvie Clelland
Doug Clelland
Born Douglas Jarvie Clelland13 May 1945Glasgow, Scotland
Nationality British European
Alma mater The Mackintosh School of Architecture, GlasgowKingston College of Art (now Kingston University), LondonThe Architectural Association School of Architecture, London
Occupation(s) Architect and author
Parent(s) Robert Clelland (father)Anstruther MacDonald (mother)
Practice JARVIE Architecture and Writing Limited (CEO)
Buildings Extension to the Mulberry House School, LondonWest Coast Energy, MoldNorris90 – Social Housing, LiverpoolSiemens VT, Berlin10 Friedrichstraße, BerlinGartnernes Forsikring, CopenhagenThe Studio / Windle House, London
Projects Gwent Health CentreDoll's HouseDurham University Oriental MuseumLittle Big HouseTri'Rhena Pavilion, Basel, SwitzerlandOperation Desert Flower, Southern SpainGuggenheim Museum, Helsinki
Design Kentish Town, LondonMarsham Street, LondonEastern Boulevard, GlasgowCentral EdinburghWilhelmstraße, BerlinFriedrichstraße 10-12, BerlinAllerton Bywater Millennium Community, YorkshireNorris Green Boot Estate, LiverpoolOsbaldwick, YorkNewton Aycliffe – zero carbon housingNarrows Island, Liverpool

Douglas Jarvie Clelland (born 13 May 1945) is a Scottish architect, educator and writer.

As an architect, he has practised as Clelland Associates (1972–1996), Aire Design (1996–2007) and JARVIE Architecture and Writing (2015–2022). His most recent completed building is an extension to the Mulberry House School in London.[1] He has also acted as a design consultant to JIG Architects (2007–2015). His recent teaching positions include Herbert Rowse Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at Liverpool John Moores University (1994–2010)[2] and professor of architecture at the Beuth University of Applied Sciences in Berlin (2013–2016). He is currently emeritus professor at Liverpool John Moores University and continues to teach in Berlin. He has written extensively as an academic, and has written non-architectural works including God's Brains[3] and Joyful Darkness.[4]

Doug Clelland was born in Glasgow in May 1945 and attended Eastbank Primary School until the age of nine. He completed his schooling at Hutchesons' Boys Grammar School.

In 1963, Clelland commenced part-time architectural education at the Mackintosh School of Architecture, Glasgow School of Art.

He moved to London in 1966, studying for a year at Kingston College of Art. He worked on projects including a proposed S-Bahn station in Leicester and sites in Kidderminster and Notting Hill. In 1967 he worked in Canada and the United States for various architects, including John Andrews and Louis Kahn.

He completed his formal architectural education at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, obtaining his diploma in architecture in 1970. Projects there included a proposed eastern expansion of London and a river edge urban development in the Isles of Grain and Sheppey.

He taught at the Architectural Association from 1971 to 1975, sharing units with Daniel Libeskind and Dalibor Vesely. He also worked at the Polytechnic of Central London (PCL), where he ran the urban architecture studio until 1988.

He commenced private practice in 1972 and completed a set of small buildings in London, Nackington near Canterbury and Forgandenny in Perthshire. Continuing to have his base in London, the Weinreb Studio in Highgate, London (1988), received a Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) regional award and the Gartnernes Forsikring in Taastrup, Denmark (1989) a Danish design award.

His involvement with Berlin commenced in 1977 and since then, he has published a number of journals on the city, was involved in the Internationale Bauausstellung (IBA) from 1984 to 1987, and designed buildings for Siemens and GSW Immobilien. He was elected to the Berlin Architektenkammer in 1992.

Maintaining bases in London and Berlin, he participated in the Internationale Bauausstellung (1984–1987), was a member of a series of juries for competitions in post-1989 Berlin, and completed two buildings there, one for Siemens.[5]

From 1989 to 1991, Clelland lived largely in his home city of Glasgow. During its time as European Capital of Culture in 1990, he conceived and managed the keynote event Glasgow's Glasgow.

He returned to full-timem teaching in 1994 as the Herbert James Rowse Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at Liverpool John Moores University, where he remained until 2010. Since then he has mixed practice, teaching and writing – in recent years committing more time and resources to travel and, as with many colleagues and friends, to a reflection on globalisation.

He acted as a professor of architecture at the Beuth University of Applied Sciences in Berlin and professor of architecture at the University of Malta.[6]

Clelland continues to practice as an architect and is the author of two non-architectural books. He divides his time between Oxfordshire, Gers in France and Berlin. He is the father of three daughters and one son.

Buildings and projects

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Glasgow Corporation

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Clelland Associates

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Dolls House

Gwent Health Centre

Little Big House

Gartnernes Forsikring, Copenhagen

10 Friendrichstrasse, Berlin

The Studio

Siemens VT, Berlin

Norris90 - Social Housing, Liverpool

West Coast Energy, Mold

Operation Desert Flower, Spain (2007)

Design consultant to JIG Architects

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JARVIE Architecture

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Guggenheim Museum

The Mulberry House School, London

Kentish Town, London

Wilhelmstrasse, Berlin

Eastern Boulevard, Glasgow

Central Edinburgh

Marsham Street, London

Allerton Bywater Millennium Community

Allerton Bywater Millennium Community competition winning entry

Osbaldwick, York

Norris Green 'Boot Estate', Liverpool

Selected seminars and consultations

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Jury member for a range of architectural competitions including:

Clelland has given numerous public lectures throughout his career.

Architectural Association

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The continuation of the ideology and programme of philosophically grounded urban architecture, established by Dalibor Vesely, with summer school surveys of medieval French towns thrown in for added joie de vivre.

Polytechnic of Central London (PCL), now University of Westminster

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Part of the successful drive under Allen Cunningham to establish PCL as a serious competitor to 34-36 Bedford Square.

University of Calgary School of Architecture

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Visiting professor of architecture, the University of Calgary School of Architecture, Alberta, Canada, 1986 and 1987. Design Studio and theory courses.

Mackintosh School of Architecture

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Final Year Studio Tutor, the Mackintosh School of Architecture, Glasgow, 1988 and 1989 during enabling work for the European Capital of Culture, 1990.

University of Malta

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Visiting professor of architecture, the University of Malta (2012 to 2014).

Liverpool John Moores University (JMU)

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Reworking the curriculum with the collaboration of colleagues – emphasis on urban re-vitalisation with Liverpool as a local laboratory. Growing enrolment numbers and institutional income.

Annual focus of work demonstrated in publications and public exhibitions / meetings.

Author of the curriculum and visiting professor of architecture at Beykent University, Istanbul, Turkey (2005 to 2008).

Selected publications on projects and buildings

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The Weinreb House, London

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Siemens Building, Treptow, Berlin

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Glasgow's Glasgow Exhibition

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Guest-edited journals

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The Mulberry House School extension

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Professor at Liverpool John Moores University

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Other interests and activities

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Clelland has served on the City of London and Westminster Society of Architects (CLAWSA) branch of the RIBA, and on the Council of the Architectural Association School of Architecture, London. He has served as a Governor of the Bramber Nursery School in Fulham, West London. He has been an invigilator and reader for the RIBA on the Dissertation Medal in 1994, 1995 and 1996 and has been Chairman of the Projects Committee of the Merseyside Civic Society. He has been a participant in the Standing Conference for Heads of Schools of Architecture (SCHOSA) and has been active in the European Association for Architectural Education (EAAE).

Doug has been married four times and has four children.

His main interests include other people, the history of human ideas, and the preference of substance over superficiality. Thinking, wondering, conversing, writing, travelling, reading, sketching and walking are Clelland's principal leisure activities.

  1. ^ Editor, A. T. (2019-02-20). "Bridge Partners". Architecture Today. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  2. ^ Jackson, Ian (2009-03-17). "Talk on Bauhaus at JMU". Art in Liverpool. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  3. ^ Clelland, Doug (2016-06-07). God's Brains. Arena books. ISBN 978-1-909421-91-2.
  4. ^ Clelland, Doug (2018-02-20). Joyful Darkness. Arena books. ISBN 978-1-911593-42-3.
  5. ^ Siemens
  6. ^ University of Malta
  7. ^ Doctrines of the City Architectural Design, 10/11, 1979, pp284-287.
  8. ^ Learning and Teaching Magazine of the Polytechnic of Central London, 1979.
  9. ^ Berlin and Antiquity Architectural Design, 8/9, 1979, pp214-221
  10. ^ Much Ado About Nothing – The Sainsbury Centre, Architectural Design, 2, 1979, pp27-28
  11. ^ Walter Benjamin and Michael Graves, International Architect, No. 2, 1979, pp68
  12. ^ Public Space – Interests, Prospects and Prejudices, Issue One, PCL, London, 1979, pp12–22
  13. ^ New Towns – Their Origins, Achievements and Progress, Architectural Design, 5/6, 1979, pp141
  14. ^ We are more than rational beings – Hans Scharoun: Imagining Social Justice as City Landscape, 9H, No. 1, 1980, pp28–35
  15. ^ From Calm Poetry to Failed Epic – Some notes on Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Architectural Design, 7/8, 1980, pp106–114
  16. ^ Karl Friedrich Schinkel – Collected Architectural Designs, Introductory Essay – Academy Editions, 1982
  17. ^ Post War Berlin – Guest Editor, Architectural Design, 11/12, 1982, Summary, pp26; Architecture and the Vitality of Culture, pp27–29; From Ideology to Disenchantment, pp41–45; From Ideology to Scepticism, pp48–51; Post–War Berlin, pp88–89
  18. ^ Architecture in Progress – Guest Editor, Architectural Design, Introductory Essay, 1/2, 1983, pp2–4 and The Wilhelmstraße Project by Douglas Clelland, 1983, pp103–108
  19. ^ Architecture in the Middle, Building Design, A review of 'British Architecture Now', October 1983, pp11
  20. ^ Berlin – An Architectural History – Guest Editor, Architectural Design, 11/12, 1983
  21. ^ Introductory Essay pp5–15
  22. ^ Celebrating 1984 – Contrast between two Architectural Festivals, Building Design, October 1983, pp14–16
  23. ^ Britische Architektur Heute, Hauser, 2/84, 1984, pp9
  24. ^ Gadamer, Hermeneutics and Architecture, Issue Four, PCL, London, 1984, pp35–44
  25. ^ Anchoring the Architectural, Building Design, April 1984, pp18–19
  26. ^ Is there a British Tradition? The Architectural Review, May 1984, pp47
  27. ^ Stadtluft macht Frei, Idee, Prozess, Ergebnis, Internationale Bauausstellung, Berlin, 1984, pp289–291
  28. ^ Berlin as Model – Guest Editor, The Architectural Review, September 1984; Berlin 1984 – The Milestone and the Millstone, pp19–22; Project for Friedrichstraße 10, pp75–77
  29. ^ Berliner Ensemble, pp26–31; Berlin Variations, pp20–24, Building Design, September 1984
  30. ^ Four of a Kind – Four exhibitions of architectural drawings, Building Design, November 1984, pp16–30
  31. ^ Withdrawal Symptoms, The Architectural Review, May, Review of the book 'Architecture of Solitude: Cistercian Abbeys of Twelfth–Century England', 1985, pp 80
  32. ^ The Architecture of Tom Beeby', BD, May, pp2; and of 'Michael Graves' BD, June 1985, pp2
  33. ^ Pieces of Eight – A critique of the 'Rauchstraße' housing, Berlin, Building Design, February 1986, pp16–21
  34. ^ Ungers Gateways, The Architectural Review, A critique, March 1986, pp52–56
  35. ^ Berlin – IBA – Guest Editor, The Architectural Review, April 1987, Berlin – Origins to IBA, pp23–28; In our Times, pp43–46
  36. ^ David und Friedrich Gilly, in 'Biographen zur baulichen Entwicklung Berlins' 1987, pp125–146
  37. ^ The Words and The Stones, Publisher and Executive Editor 1990; Preface pp1–7, 250pp book on Glasgow's History. Main text by Carl MacDougall
  38. ^ Glasgow's Glasgow – A Tour of the Exhibition. Publisher and Executive Editor, 1990, 91pp
  39. ^ Hello to Berlin II – The new Government Centre in Berlin, Building Design, March 1993, pp8
  40. ^ Power Games – Review of 'Architecture and Ideology in Eastern Europe' by Anders Åman, Architecture Today 37, May 1993, pp7 – 8
  41. ^ Idol Work – Review of the St Mungo's Museum of Religious Life in Glasgow, Museums Journal, February 1994, pp30
  42. ^ My Kind of Town', Sintra in Portugal – Architecture Today No 48, May 1994, pp64
  43. ^ Inhabiting the Void, not the Vacuum, between tradition and liberation, essay for the catalogue 'Die Fabrik in der Stadt', Aedes Galerie Berlin, October 1994, pp 20–28.
  44. ^ Striking out on the Path of Urban Regeneration: Some Features of the Landscape, some Temptations among the Trees, Proceedings of the Conference "Africa 2000", Cape Town, South Africa, 1995
  45. ^ CityWorks1, Introduction – Liverpool 2046', LJMU Publications, May 1996, pp1–25
  46. ^ Liverpool: going into the cellar for a handle on a future – some preliminary notes on the new modern architecture, EAAE Workshop 30, The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, September 1996, pp11–23
  47. ^ CityWorks2, Introduction – Nature and Architecture', pp1; Visions for Liverpool, pp66–81, LJMU Publications, May 1997
  48. ^ The Museum of Scotland, RIBA Journal, November 1997
  49. ^ Designs on the future of the entire nation – the proposed Scottish Parliament, The Herald, January 10, 1998, pp6
  50. ^ CityWorks3, Introduction – Architecture and Urban Design', pp1; Visions for Liverpool, pp66–80, LJMU Publications, May 1998
  51. ^ Genes–Dreams–Designs – Tourism and the creation of future heritage – Proceedings of the Conference 'Heritage, Multicultural Attractions and Tourism', Istanbul, August 1998
  52. ^ On the architecture of Architecture: constructing the curricula for the future, Keynote paper, first conference for European Heads of Schools, EAAE, Chania, Crete, September 1998
  53. ^ CityWorks4, Introduction – Architecture and the Urban Renaissance: the generic and the particularity of Liverpool, pp1; Studies for the Compact City, pp66–81, LJMU Publications, May 1999
  54. ^ Cars and the Future Home, Popular Housing Forum – 2000 – ISBN 0-9542856-0-3
  55. ^ On the Establishment of New Communities: Allerton Bywater and Osbaldwick Fields, ARQ (Architectural Research Quarterly) Volume 4 no. 3 – September 2000
  56. ^ Tourism and Future Heritage: Genes – Dreams – Designs, or the Engaging Syndrome of S, S and S, Built Environment, Volume 26, Number 2, 2000 on 'Urban Tourism' 2000, pp99–116
  57. ^ LiverpoolCityWorks – Acts of Dynamic Recovery, Concept and Commentary pp1–38. LJMU Publications, May 2000
  58. ^ CityWorks5, Introduction – Moving On: The Centre for Architecture and its New Cycle of Renewal, pp1; Studies for The Strand, pp66–81, LJMU Publications, May 2000
  59. ^ Speaking of the Sainsbury Centre' in 'On Foster ... Foster On' pp49, Prestel Verlag, 2000
  60. ^ Human Lava and the Pompeii Factor': review of Tourists in Historic Towns, by Aylin Orbasli, book review for Journal of Urban Design, 2001
  61. ^ British Council Symposium Mind the Gap: Berlin – London, Introduction pp5, Density and Urban Lifestyle in London, 2001, pp 53–57
  62. ^ The Liverpool Vision with the buzz of Civic Life, Parliamentary Brief, July 2001
  63. ^ From CityWorks to CultureWorks', Introduction – Broom at the Bin or Room at the Inn, p1; The Year 2000 Studio, pp66–79, LJMU Publications, May 2001
  64. ^ CultureWorks1, Introduction – CultureWorks, pp 1; Urbs in Horto, pp66–80, LJMU Publications, May 2002
  65. ^ Critical review of The Lowry Centre, Architecture Today 110, 2003, pp48–63
  66. ^ CultureWorks2, Introduction – CultureWorks2, pp1; Urbs in Horto 2, pp66–80, LJMU Publications, February 2004
  67. ^ True Grit or Too Grim', a reflection on Liverpool, pp80–81, The Architectural Review, January 2008
  68. ^ Masterplans for the Twenty–First Century, pp29–30, Urban Design, July 2008
  69. ^ Blackpool in Focus, pp20–27, A. Magazine, Spring 2010
  70. ^ Chester in Focus, pp22–29, A. Magazine, Autumn 2010
  71. ^ Carlisle in Focus, pp14–21, A. Magazine, Autumn 2009
  72. ^ Berlin 1989 – 2009: Reviving the principles of the European city, pp50–81, Architecture Today, 203, November 2009
  73. ^ God's Brains – The Surging Tide of Humanity, Arena Books, 2016
  74. ^ Joyful Darkness – Entangled in the Invisible, Arena Books, 2018
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  77. ^ RIBA Journal
  78. ^ Architecture Today, January 1990, pages 34-39
  79. ^ Architecture Today, Issue 50
  80. ^ Die Fabrik in der Stadt, Douglas Clelland mit Siemensstadt Grundstucksverwaltung, Neubau Siemens Verkehrstechnik, Berlin-Treptow, pg 4
  81. ^ Die Fabrik in der Stadt, Douglas Clelland mit Siemensstadt Grundstucksverwaltung, Neubau Siemens Verkehrstechnik, Berlin-Treptow, pg 7
  82. ^ World Cities – Berlin, pages 291 to 293
  83. ^ The International Magazine Editorial, November 1990 issue
  84. ^ Architectural Review, November 1990, pages 79-82
  85. ^ Bauwelt, 18 January 1991
  86. ^ The Times, 24 April 1990
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