World War E
Ryan Cook. London, United Kingdom
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Name of work in English
World War E
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Name of work in original language
The Environmental Defence Agency
Prize year
Young Talent 2020
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Work Location
London, United Kingdom
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Author/s
Ryan Cook
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School
Undergraduate School - Architectural Association School of Architecture.
London, United Kingdom
Young Talent 2020 YT Nominees
World War E
The Environmental Defence Agency
Program
Landscape
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Labels
Regeneration
World War E is a reflection on the role of the architect today, redeploying its skillset to respond to situations of urgency and crisis. Through the proposal for a new institution - the Environmental Defence Agency - the project orchestrates a series of architectures and land change strategies, to increase carbon reserves in a Post-EU, Post-CAP Britain.
Responding to the 2018 IPCC report on Climate Change, the project proposes the definition of a new contextual condition - World War E. Through maps, advertising, cartography, colour, architecture, history, video, animation, typography, text, data, fashion, policy and current affairs - the project composes an illustration of a very real place, in a very near state of unrest. With historic and contemporary precedent pointing to the militarisation of crisis, the project for World War E is a personal attempt to understand a person, politics and planet in a state of ecological decline and the role an architect can assume in it’s milieu. \nThe formation of a new institution - the Environmental Defence Agency - is proposed as a merger between the ecological expertise of existing environmental bodies and the logistical capabilities of the Ministry of Defence estate. Interrogating the role of heritage and preservation, in a situation calling for deep adaptation, the project identifies the country house and its adjoining estate, as a historic and contemporary agent in the shaping of our national territory. Through a series of land change strategies - the project proposes for heritage designations to play a key role in future carbon sequestration scenarios. In the loopholes of a Post-EU, Post Common Agricultural Policy Britain, an opportunity exists within the tension between public and private land ownership, to establish more extensive, efficient and diverse landscapes and habitats.\nWith notions of national identity so entrenched in landscape and territory, the action of the Environmental Defence Agency aims to contribute towards a newly reformed and ecologically concerned citizen - dramatically transforming the idyll of the British rural landscape within both the short and long term timeframes. In defining the physical spaces of warfare - as the territorial space of exception, the physical target and the logistical uniform - the project raises questions of the role individual democratic concessions play within periods of rapid and total change.