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Role:
Department staff:
Collaborations:
Research staff:
- Architectural and urban design
- Architectural Representation
- Architectural Drawing
- Urban Representation
- Visual Culture
- Architectural Research by Design
- Design Research
- History of Architectural Design
- Architectural Theory
Teaching staff:
- Qualifications:DipArch PhD MSc FHEA
- Position:Senior Lecturer in Architecture
- Department:College of Arts, Technology and Environment
- Telephone:+4411732 86128
- Email:Sophia.Banou@uwe.ac.uk
About me
I have studied architecture at the National Technical
University of Athens, Newcastle University and the University of Edinburgh (ESALA), from where I hold a PhD in Architecture by Design. I am an architect registered with the ARB (UK) and TEE (Technical Chambers of Greece). Before Joining UWE in 2018, I taught architectural design and
theory at Newcastle University (SAPL) and the University of Edinburgh
(ESALA), while I am also a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA).
I have been an editor for Charrette, the journal of the Association of Architectural Educators and Drawing On: Journal of Architectural Research by Design, while I have reviewed for publications such as The Journal of Architecture and New Design Ideas.
I welcome inquiries about PhD and PhD by Design/creative practice supervision in the wider areas of architectural representation, theory, history, design, heritage and visual culture.
Area of expertise
My doctoral research (The Kinematography of a City: Moves
into Drawing)
regarded issues of architectural notation and representation, with respect to
the concept of space as a temporal and kinetic condition and the idea of architectural representation as a situated spatial
practice. This involved engaging with installation as a form of 'drawing in space' as well a critical historical study of architectural representation and architecture's negotiations with the visual modalities of modernity. My current research extends this thinking by focusing on the
semiotic and technological challenges posed for architectural drawing, and by extent architectural and urban design, in the
context of a digitised, yet cinematic, visual culture.