George Clarke announces winners of Gravity building design competition for young people

Talented schoolchildren produce inspiring designs for gravity place making challenge

Renowned architect and TV presenter George Clarke has announced the winners of the Gravity young persons’ design challenge for schools in and around Bridgwater, Somerset. 

The challenge, created by his education charity MOBIE – Ministry of Building Innovation and Education – asked young people to let their imaginations run free by designing an innovative and inspirational green place with jobs and homes that meets the changing needs of future generations, including promoting wellbeing, quality of life and healthy ageing.

The Gravity project will create a unique place: a sustainable, connected smart campus that delivers economic transformation, a sustainable environment, between 4000 and 7,500 jobs in cleaner, green businesses, with up to 750 new homes for the workforce.

Located near Bridgwater, in Sedgemoor, Somerset, just south of Bristol, it is an amazing development that is seeking to accelerate a response to addressing climate change whilst creating new jobs and homes. Gravity will create a new location for clean, large-scale advanced manufacturing industries.  It will be a place where people can choose to work and live – ‘a blueprint for a smarter, greener future’.

The presenter of Channel 4 programmes Restoration Man, George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces and Old House New Home said: “Home is the most important piece of architecture in our lives. It crafts the way we live, and how we grow as families and communities. Well-designed places and communities like Gravity can enhance the way we live and promote good health and wellbeing”.

Clarke added: “The communities and homes of the future will be lived in by today’s young people. That is why I am so excited to announce the winners of this young persons’ design challenge. We asked young people, aged between 11 and 18, to design a place and home of the future – a sustainable, adaptable, green place that promotes wellbeing, quality of life and healthy ageing. 

“From past experience I expected to see amazing design talent and imagination come forward, and I was not disappointed. It was hard for the judges to choose the overall winner, age group winners and the runners up. They were genuinely wowed by the standard of the work that these young people produced. The winners created some incredible and inspirational, future thinking designs. The future of the built environment and homes is in great hands with young talent like this around – I can’t wait to see what they do next.”

The overall winner of the challenge is Alyssa Ghio of Chilton Trinity School, Bridgwater with her amazing Pythagoras House design.

Pythagoras House

Claire Pearce, Director of Planning and Economic Development for Gravity commented “re-imagining the Gravity site ensures we can fully consider how we respond to climate change and in doing so to attract international businesses to the South West. Occupiers require an accessible workforce so our approach of enabling a new era of clean growth together with dedicated homes for the workforce, within a campus and community is really exciting. We hope the design challenge has inspired young people about Gravity, and motivated them to aspire to learn, live and work in Somerset in the future”.

Gill Slocombe, Deputy Leader for Sedgemoor District Council added: “The competition has encouraged young people to think deeply about place making; what do they want from Gravity and places of the future? What kind of workspaces and homes create a happy, healthy and well-connected place to live and work? The high quality of the competition entries demonstrates that young people are full of ideas about how we can create better, greener and smarter places.  I would like to congratulate the winners and to thank everyone who has taken part.”

The Young persons’ design challenge was open to schools and colleges located near to the Gravity site in Sedgemoor District in Somerset with three age groups – 7-11, 12-15 and 16-18.  It asked them to create houses and a space that they care about and want to live and spend time in. The place and home should be environmentally ‘super-green’, use sustainable building methods and materials, green energy and smart technology with an emphasis on health and wellbeing of people, the community and our planet.

The age group winners are as follows:

Age 7 – 11

Theodore Spreadbury (age 8), Erin Waghorn (age 9) and Darcey Pike (age 10), Spaxton Primary School

Age 12 – 15

Wolfetone Kelly, James Steinhardt and Max Brophy (15), Sidcot School, Winscombe, North Somerset

Sarah Ingram, Liv Jeffrey and Stephanie Hills, Haygrove School, Bridgwater

Age 16 – 18

Harvey Lawrence (17), Sidcot School

Alyssa Ghio, Chilton Trinity School, Bridgwater

More information about the design challenge at www.mobie.org.uk

ENDS

For more information please contact MOBIE CEO: Mark Southgate – (t) 07917 427474, (e) mark.southgate@mobie.org.uk

NOTES TO EDITOR

About MOBIE

MOBIE – The Ministry of Building Innovation and Education – was established in 2017 by architect and TV presenter, George Clarke.  It promises to inspire new generations to join the building and construction professions and fundamentally transform the way we think about, design and construct homes both in the UK and abroad. An educational, research and development charity, MOBIE’s purpose is to focus on developing innovative ways to build homes, providing access to education and skills development and vitally, challenge the housing market to do better. Spearheading advanced home design and construction thinking, MOBIE will work with both industry and government to create homes that will genuinely transform the way we live in Britain. www.mobie.org.uk

About Gravity

Gravity will be one of the most sustainable smart campuses in Europe, addressing climate change whilst creating new jobs and homes, and reducing the impact that businesses have on the environment by providing a clean, low-carbon environment for them to operate in. It will create a unique place: a sustainable, connected smart campus that delivers economic transformation, a sustainable environment, between 4000 and 7,500 jobs in cleaner, green businesses, and with up to 750 new homes for the workforce. It is located near to Bridgwater, in Sedgemoor, Somerset, just south of Bristol.

George Clarke launches Gravity design competition for students in Somerset

Gravity Design Competition -George-Clarke-headshot

Gravity is teaming up with two educational charities to launch a design competition that aims to encourage local youngsters to get involved with the project to create the UK’s first smart campus and community.

Gravity is launching the Gravity Young Persons’ Design Challenge in partnership with Bounce Forward, a charity dedicated to teaching young people resilience as a life skill, and the Ministry of Building Innovation and Education (MOBIE), a charity founded by architect and TV Presenter George Clarke to inspire young people to rethink the way we design and build places and communities, and offering them a window into a future career in the built environment.

Primary and secondary schools, and colleges across Sedgemoor are being invited to take part in the competition to imagine and design what kind of a place Gravity will be to achieve its vision of creating a zero-carbon community that integrates work, rest and play.  

Claire Pearce, Director of Planning and Economic Development at Gravity, comments: “Gravity is committed to ensuring that this landmark project delivers benefits to the local community, even at this very early stage. We’re excited to be working with Bounce Forward and MOBIE, and engaging with local schools and colleges, to take advantage of the educational opportunities that Gravity is already creating.

“As a project which will create over 4000 jobs, it is important to think about how we can reduce the need to travel to work, what we can include as part of the scheme to help local people access work opportunities, and how to design in integrated homes and leisure opportunities, as part of a new integrated, and sustainable community.

“Through this competition, we’re encouraging young people to think about place making; what do they want from Gravity and places of the future? What kind of workspaces and homes create a happy, healthy and well-connected place to live and work?”

The challenge

Students will be challenged to design a zero-carbon home in a new employment led community that reflects Gravity’s vision of being clean and inclusive, considering the wellbeing of people, the community, and the planet. Youngsters will need to show their home in the context of its wider place, including connections to work, green space and transport links, and how smart technology would be used to support new ways of living.  

George Clarke, MOBIE founder, says, “MOBIE is all about young people and the future of the built environment. I am delighted that we are launching this exciting design challenge for schools in Sedgemoor, to create a new home and place on the ground-breaking Gravity smart campus and community – a place for clean, advanced manufacturing industries and for people to live, a new place to live, work and play.  

“By harnessing the talents, ideas and energy of the young people of today we can change the way we create places and how we build homes. The amazing student designs that I know will flow from this challenge will show that we have a future generation with the talent and the imagination to really make a difference for people and the planet.”

Support for students and teachers

MOBIE and Bounce Forward have already hosted a webinar to provide participating schools with information and support about how to get involved. Further webinars for schools are available on request. Bounce Forward will also run three webinars aimed at secondary school students to support their involvement with the competition and personal resilience. In addition, Bounce Forward will run webinars to support teachers’ personal development.

Lucy Bailey, Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Bounce Forward, explains: “Our overall aim is to help young people develop resilience, not just to overcome setbacks, but to solve problems and think creatively. In the context of this competition, we want to support students, and their teachers, to be open and curious to new perspectives and have the confidence to let their imaginations go.” 

Cllr Gill Slocombe, Deputy Leader of Sedgemoor District Council, adds: “This competition presents a wonderful opportunity for young people to get involved with Gravity – a project of national and international importance located here in their local area. As plans emerge to create this innovative and sustainable community in Sedgemoor, it’s important we listen to what young people want from Gravity, and for their future.”

The Gravity Young Persons’ Design Challenge has three age categories, 9-11, 12-15 and 16-18. The finalists will be announced on 18 June and the winners revealed at an event to take place in June or July 2021 (details to be confirmed). For more information, visit: https://www.mobie.org.uk/challenges/gravity.

Ends

For more information, please contact Tori Madine at 07508 917 477 or tori.madine@social.co.uk

1. George Clarke
2. Artist’s impression of Gravity

Notes to editors

About Gravity

Gravity will be the UK’s first commercial smart campus and a blueprint for a ‘cleaner’, smarter future. It aims to attract the world’s most innovative companies working in the ‘clean growth’ sectors.

Based on the site of the former Royal Ordnance 

Expected to create around 4,000 jobs, the 616-acre Enterprise Zone will be designed to shape connections between people and the places they work, supporting a culture of innovation and wellbeing. It will include diverse, flexible workspaces and resilient technologies along with enhanced transport links to, and within, the surrounding area.

For further information, visit https://thisisgravity.co.uk/

About MOBIE

Architect and TV Presenter George Clarke founded the Ministry of Building Innovation and Education (MOBIE) in 2017 to inspire young people to revolutionise the way we think about homes. We need younger generations to define how they want to live now and in the future, and MOBIE helps them do it. https://www.mobie.org.uk/

About Bounce Forward

Bounce Forward is a national charity that delivers inspiring and practical training programmes to support young people to reach their full potential in life. The charity believes that teaching resilience skills should sit alongside academic lessons and have spent 13 years working directly with more than 1,800 schools and delivering research to evidence what they do.

Core principles

  • Resilience is not just about overcoming setbacks, it’s also about making the most of opportunities
  • We base our approach and training on solid research, theory and evidence
  • We teach skills and strategies that work in the real world
  • The adults matter: their role is vital in helping children and young people be resilient and thrive

https://bounceforward.com

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