Canalside Press

Screenshot 2020-10-23 at 10.21.00.png

On Continuity: John Spence in Hackney
2024

Patrick and Claudia Lynch (editors), Rachel Elliott, Andy Groarke et al
Hardcover Book (forthcoming autumn 2024)
£35

On Continuity is the fourth book in our Modern Architecture in Reflection series, and it concerns the work in Hackney for The Crown Estate by the somewhat secretive British architect John Spence. Spence worked on a series of infill sites throughout the 1960s and '70s, bomb sites situated around the fringes of Victoria Park, London E9. Little is known about the elusive architect: he shunned publicity, whilst devoting himself diligently to building housing for low income workers. Patrick Lynch and Rachel Elliott have engaged in an ongoing act of architectural detection, seeking out the sources of Spence's late-modernist design decisions, and the book presents archival drawings and photography alongside new drawings by Lynch Architects. It also includes essays by the  architect Andy Groarke, and other recent and current residents, as well as new photography by Grant Smith and Tara Darby.

Read more

Dialogue and Imagination.jpg

Patrick Lynch and Others
Dialogue and Imagination: Conversations with Architects
2024

Dialogue and Imagination brings together a number of conversations between the architect Patrick Lynch and some of the most interesting thinkers of our age. Participants in these conversations include Rafael Moneo, Peter Zumthor, Joseph Rykwert, Francesco Venezia, Jeanette Kuo, Birkin Haward, Tom de Paor, John Meunier, Jessica Reynolds, Craig Hamilton, Timothy Hill, Dalibor Vesely, Joseph Rykwert, Kate Mackintosh, Tony Fretton, Tim Waterman, Aaron Peters and Stuart Vokes, with a special guest appearance by the writer and curator Kieran Long.

The conversations cover wide ground. As dialogues between creative colleagues, questions recur concerning the role of history, drawing and teaching in an architect's life. Also, the influence of literature and painting upon the architectural imagination, as well as the role of theology, science and philosophy in imaginative design work. These topics are discussed with candor and an unusual degree of frankness. What emerges, Tom de Paor suggests, is an alternative history of the recent past of modern architecture: a richer, more nuanced, and more honest account than you normally encounter today.

Read more

Screenshot 2022-12-02 at 13.09.21.png

Aaron Peters and Stuart Vokes
Migrations from Memory
2023

Migrations from Memory is an anthology - a collection of offerings reminiscent of a bunch of flowers picked from the roadsides of Brisbane - of words and images by the celebrated Australian architects Vokes and Peters. The book is structured as a series of dialogues, email exchanges that expand upon the themes in essays that grow out of their shared love for the geography and architecture of Brisbane. Accompanying these are essays by the legendary Norwegian architect and teacher Brit Andresen and London architect Patrick Lynch.

Read more

Screenshot 2023-04-06 at 18.05.58.png

Penny Cliff
Oriel
2023

Oriel is a luminous collection of transformations forming a portrait of an ordinary London house over the past forty years. The extraordinary and ultra-mundane rhythms of life there coalesce into twenty five poems about various guests, freight trains, animals, friends, lovers, children, music and death.

Read more

IDEAS ETC COVER

Celia Scott, Robert Maxwell and others
Ideas, Faces and Places: Sweet Disorder and the Carefully Careless
2023

Ideas, Faces and Places is a record of an exhibition and symposium that took place in Dublin at The Irish Architectural Archive in the autumn of 2022, “Sweet Disorder and the Carefully Careless: Ideas, Faces and Places”, which transferred to RIBA headquarters in London in the Spring of 2023. The book is a repository for some of the observations that arose at these events made by architects and critics including John Tuomey, Ed Jones, Irina Davidovici, Kenneth Frampton and others. The exhibition juxtaposed Celia Scott’s busts of the architects James Stirling, Leon Krier, Alan Colquhoun, Ed Jones and others, with a pictorial biography of her husband, the eminent architect and academic Robert Maxwell (1922-2020). The view that this book offers of the exhibition and of the work of Scott and Maxwell is provisional and partial, offering the reader the chance to meander and to relish unexpected juxtapositions and oblique views of its subjects - almost exactly like the rooms that Celia Scott created in Dublin and in London. Robert Maxwell was one of the most important architectural theorists and teachers of the second half of the 20th century - this book is an essential addition to his oeuvre.

Read more

COVER.png

Part of a City: The Work of Neave Brown Architect
2022

Patrick and Claudia Lynch and David Porter (editors), Neave Brown, Kenneth Frampton, Robert Maxwell, Ed Jones, Peter Barber, Amy Young, Tony Fretton, Jonathan Sergison, Simon Henley, Paul Karakusevic, John Zhang, David Evans, Reyner Banham, Patrick Hodgkinson, Christopher Woodward, et al with new photography by Sue Barr et al

Hardcover Book
416pp
£38

Part of a City: The Work of Neave Brown Architect explores the ethos and ideas of the Anglo-American architect Neave Brown (1929-2018), winner of the RIBA Gold Medal 2017. Part of a City gets its title from Brown’s Gold Medal acceptance speech, when he observed: “We weren’t making housing, we were making part of a city.” The book brings together his writing and design projects, including his celebrated large-scale urban housing work for Camden Council, and the later projects in Italy and The Netherlands, the latter undertaken in private practise with David Porter. Part of a City re-presents original critiques from the 1960s and 1970s by prominent figures such as Reyner Banham, Bob Maxwell, Christopher Woodward and Ed Jones, with new writing by architects and critics including Kenneth Frampton, Jonathan Sergsion, Simon Henley, Paul Karakuservic and Peter Barber.

Read more

Screenshot 2021-02-23 at 11.57.27.png

Graeme Brooker
50|50 WORDS FOR REUSE – A minifesto
2021

Softcover Book

144pp

£12.99

50|50 Words is a collection of language to describe reuse. It is not a taxonomy, a word that stuffs all it encounters, nor is it a hectoring bleat. It is a minifesto; a big shout in small type. Why 50? Well, why not? Each word is an instrument; a contrivance chosen deliberately in order to activate another 50 associations. Words are like buildings. They reflect cultures and embody continuous change.

The revisions of both are comprehended through the processes of reuse. Yet, present lexes do not effectively describe the future of the past. 50|50 is both polemic and a paean. The idiosyncratic poetry of a voice finding its feet. Its claim is to declare a current vocabulary, one that articulates centuries of practice, the unfinished business of words and buildings in unending change.

Read more

R WALKER COVER

Change is the Reality: The Work of Robin Walker Architect
2021

Robin Walker, Patrick Lynch and Simon Walker (editors), Elizabeth Hatz, Tom de Paor, Douglas Carson, Niall McLaughlin and Laura Evans

Hardcover Book
329pp
£30

Produced in the same format & size as On Intricacy, Change is the Reality is the second book in our Modern Architecture in Reflection series. It explores the ethos and ideas of Irish architect Robin Walker (1924-1991), a partner in the RIBA Gold Medal winning Dublin practice of Scott Tallon Walker. Produced in concert with Walker's son, the architect and teacher Simon Walker, Change is the Reality is an archive of Robin's articles and lectures, presented alongside new and original photographs of a number of his seminal projects, including Bothar Bui, An Bord Failte, UCD restaurant, house at Kinsale, etc. The book also includes essays by Simon Walker and Patrick Lynch, Elizabeth Hatz, Tom de Paor, Douglas Carson and Laura Evans.

Read more

an

Alex Niven, Adam Sharr & Patrick Lynch with photography by Euan Lynn
Newcastle, Endless
2021

Softcover Book

64pp
£12.99

Newcastle, Endless is a collection of lyrics and lyrical reflections upon the endlessly embroiled landscape of the city: it reveals a poetic landscape infused with the effects of topography and technology upon its architecture, language, politics and planning. It is a love poem of sorts, one dedicated to the modernist dream of “the perfect line between the/townhouse and the mephedrone highrise”, and to the myths that lurk still beneath this dream: “the river becomes a symbol of/death it is insurmountable Styx/like the lovers cannot cohere across/it”. In common with Alex Niven’s recent prose concerning the possibilities of “a new form of radical culture beyond the idea of England”, Newcastle, Endless fuses scholarship with meditation, experience with imagination, memory with speculation, inviting us to “pause our vortex for a moment to consider im/possibilities”. A utopia of actual places is revealed in the photographs of Euan Lynn and in the poet’s elliptical observations of a situation where, “here and there/everything is open".

Read more

9541**-+6

Paul Shepheard
Slogans and Battlecries
2020

Softcover Book

128pp
£9.95

Architects are a controversial bunch. Each new theory is heralded by a slogan that advertises its difference from what went before, piling complexity upon confusion. In this collection of very short essays – he thinks of them as poems - Paul Shepheard investigates the flurries of meaning that the slogans invoke. He also looks at the Building Regulations and the Material World; and uncovers an inclusive theory of architecture, implied rather than explicit, residing in the fragments. Slogans and Battlecries is the sixth book by renowned architectural writer and teacher Paul Shepheard, and continues his witty and eclectic investigations into the relationships between everyday life, the human imagination, and the natural world. Slogans and Battlecries is the first book in our paperback series Reflection in Action, which is devoted to the poetic and philosophical writings of architects and artists.

Read more

On Intricacy: The Work of John Munier Architect

On Intricacy: The Work of John Meunier Architect
2020

John Meunier, Simon Henley Patrick Lynch (editor)
Hardcover Book
288pp
£30

On Intricacy is the first book in our Modern Architecture in Reflection series. It is perhaps unusual in that it’s not a monograph, nor is it a hagiography: John Meunier is still alive. On Intricacy celebrates and proselytises the ideas that John has articulated throughout his career. On Intricacy is not a book about him as such, nor simply a book by him, but a book with him, and it reflects his life’s work as an architect and teacher, in the UK and USA. On Intricacy continues conversations between John Meunier and Patrick Lynch that first appeared in Issue 2 of the Journal of Civic Architecture. It also includes essays by Meunier, Lynch and the  architect Simon Henley, as well as new photography of the Meunier House at Cambridge by David Grandorge.

Read more

still-beautiful_thumb.jpg

Still Beautiful
2018

David Grandorge, Paul Shepheard, David Campany and Patrick Lynch (editor)

Hardcover Book

158pp

£35

David Grandorge’s work is a type of Reconnaissance. In his photographs of cities, architecture appears as part of a network of reciprocal situations. His landscapes evoke a sense of balanced disequilibrium, of great energy and stillness. Natural and man-made aspects of reality seem to occur simultaneously, almost casually, as if discovered by the photographer in a state of un-selfconscious innocence.

Read more

JoCA

63F9A1D9-0143-425E-B080-7C4CFAE00577.png

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 10
December 2023

Contributors to issue 10 include John Tuomey, Timothy Hill, Geraldine Cleary, Luke Hayes, Kerstin Thompson, Nicolas Feldmeyer, Ed Jones, Filip Galic, Amy Young and John Meunier.

Read more

COVER.png

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 9
June 2022

Contributors to issue 9 include Julian Lewis and East, Mark Pimlott, Neil Davidson and J&L Gibbons, Duncan Gibbs, Paul Shepheard, Alba Deangelis, Arijit Chatterjee, Marina Engel, Carmody Groarke, Andrew Carr, Miraj Ahmed and Claire Potter.

Read more

ISSUE 8 COVER

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 8
December 2021

Contributors to issue 8 include Aaron Peters and Stuart Vokes, Lasse Erkola, Simon Pendal, Fabio Vericat, Cathy Hawley and Hugh Strange, Christophe Van Gerreway, Francesca Torzo, Anne Whidden, Anna Sofia Hartmann, Missouri Williams and Alex Niven.

Read more

Screenshot 2021-05-18 at 19.26.25.png

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 7
May 2021

Contributors to issue 7 include Tony Fretton, Sue Barr and Farbrizio Ballabio, Hannibal Wasser, Giles Reid, Luigi Snozzi and Liam Dewar, Matthew Jones, Adam Nathaniel Furman, Marina Engel, John Merrick, Pandora Vaughn, Charles Holland, Hans Munthe-Kaas and Jesse Hager.

Read more

Screen Shot 2020-11-02 at 14.46.53.png

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 6
November 2020

Contributors to issue 6 of the JoCA include Graig Hamilton, Caroline Voet, Shahed Saleem, Grant Smith, Anthony Coleman, Roz Barr, Peter Carolin, Fulvio Orsenigo, Lars Ridderstedt, Richard Irvine, Oscar Mather, Trevor Garnham, Gianni Nottariani and Eleanor Hooker.

Read more

JoCA 5

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 5
June 2020

Contributors to issue 5 of the JoCA include Birkin Haward, Ellis Woodman, Casper Laing Ebbensgaard, Dennis Goodwin, Fulvio Orsenigo, Mark Durden and Joao Leal, William Tozer, Jacques Lucan, Patrick Lynch, Matthew Wells, Thaddeus Zupancic, John Meunier, Vittorio Greggotti, Tom de Paor, Rut Blees Luxemburg and Alex Niven.

Read more

JoCA 4 Cover

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 4
December 2019

Contributors to issue 4 of the JoCA include Peter Carl, Michael Higgins, Tim Waterman and Will Jennings, the architects Kate Macintosh, Paulo Moreira and Stephen Taylor, photographers Peter Finnemore and Jack Orton, and poet Sarah Arvio.

Read more

JoCA

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 3
June 2019

Contributors to issue 3 of the JoCA include the architects Francesco Venezia, Alun Jones, David Evans and Peter Youthed, novelist Tom McCarthy, artist Eva Stenram, architectural historian Nick Temple and poet Emily Hasler.


Read more

joca-2-cover.jpg

Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 2
December 2018

Contributors to the second issue include John Meunier, Simon Henley, Will Jennings, Rut Blees-Luxemburg, Herman Bauer (translated by Claudia Lynch), Luis Fernandez-Galiano Ruiz, Patrick Lynch, David Grandorge and Stephen DP Richardson.

Read more

Joca 1 Cover

Sold out
Journal of Civic Architecture, Issue 1
June 2018

Contributors to the first edition include Tom de Paor, Johan Celsing, Joseph Rykwert, Laura Evans, Luisa Collina, Cino Zucchi, Indra Kagis McEwen, Andrew Crompton, Michael Badu, Geraldine Clarkson and Simon Walker.

Read more