Outside Influence: Has the Architectural Pilgrimage Changed?

Design Principles Podcast, Season 2, Ep 6 with Ben Sutherland, Sam Brown, Gerard Dombroski, with guest Nina Boyd

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CPD Points

10.00 NZ Registered Architects Board Points

Presented By

Ben Sutherland, Sam Brown, Gerard Dombroski, with guest Nina Boyd

Event Description

The traditional architectural pilgrimage—traveling to see important buildings firsthand—has fundamentally changed. Where Alvar Aalto's visit to Italy completely transformed his design approach, today's architects arrive at celebrated buildings having already seen countless images online. This digital pre-exposure creates a curious paradox: greater accessibility to architectural imagery but potentially diminished impact when finally experiencing spaces in person.

Nina shares insights from her recent Scandinavian travels, exploring how Finnish towns balance high density living with beautiful public spaces. The conversation takes a candid turn when discussing famous buildings that disappointed in person—Frank Gehry's Guggenheim Bilbao described as "facadeism" and certain parametric designs criticized for poor finishes despite conceptual brilliance. These confessions reveal the gap between architectural celebrity and genuine spatial quality.

Working internationally exposes architects to different budget realities, material access, and planning approaches. While New Zealand struggles with limited resources for bespoke elements, the team explores how collaborating with local craftspeople could produce distinctive architectural moments without breaking budgets. This "small batch" approach to custom design might actually represent the future—creating architecture with a genuine human touch that resists both global homogenization and AI-driven processes.

Perhaps the most compelling insight emerges near the end: the architectural breakthrough might not require overseas travel at all. Looking inward to local craft traditions and small-scale collaborations could yield more authentic design expressions than chasing international trends. After all, architecture's most powerful aspects—temperature, texture, acoustic qualities, social interactions—resist digital flattening and demand physical presence.

Ready to rethink your architectural inspirations? Listen now, and join the conversation about where true design epiphanies come from in our digital age.

Key Outcomes:

  • The Evolving Nature of Architectural Pilgrimages
  • The Impact of Globalization and Technology on Architectural Experience
  • Where to Find Your Next Design Epiphany
Outside Influence: Has the Architectural Pilgrimage Changed? image

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