Restorative Connections with Rob Delius
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With our fragile planet facing huge environmental threats right now, there is no better time to question our relationship with the natural world - how we can live more in harmony with our environment and invite the beauty of nature into our own lives, physically and spiritually.
Rob Delius of Stride Treglown will be exploring this theme, sharing examples of what biophilia means to him personally, showing how nature-connectedness features in his and practice's work, and challenging us to imagine what a radical, enticing and urgently-needed, biodiversity-rich future might look like. He will also be talking through Stride Treglown’s ‘Tree of Dreams’ proposal for the Biophilic Bath exhibition, which he is hoping will become a reality in 2025
Rob Delius is an architect and Head of Sustainability for Stride Treglown. He was winner of the RIBA Imagine Bath Competition and was behind Stride Treglown’s Sinking House climate-awareness installation in 2021 and more recently instigated the Funeral for Nature event which campaigned for more action on biodiversity. He has produced the winning entry for RIBA competition: ‘Tomorrow’s Garden City: A Sustainable Approach to Living’ and was behind Stride Treglown’s runner-up entry for RIBA competition: ‘Re-imagining the Garden City’. He is also part of placemaking collective Architecture Is who held a Therapeutic City Festival a few years ago. He has been interviewed by and written articles for the Journal of Biophilic Design.
Stride Treglown are an employee-owned, carbon-neutral, multi-disciplinary architecture practice, with about 25 employees in Bath. In 2022 they became a B-Corp, the 1st architects in the top 100 in the UK to do so. B-Corps commit to balancing profit with people and planet.
Access Information
The Museum of Bath Architecture is housed in the Countess of Huntingdon’s Chapel.
The entrance, shop and main museum room – which houses the museum’s permanent collection and changing exhibitions – are all level access.
Assistance dogs are welcome throughout the museum. Unfortunately, the museum toilets are located up three steps and then down a flight of stairs.