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Bespoke Careers Podcast

Bespoke Careers
Bespoke Careers Podcast
Latest episode

23 episodes

  • Bespoke Careers Podcast

    Why Architects Don't Make Much Money – Phin Harper

    23/02/2026 | 54 mins.
    Phineas Harper is a London-based writer, founder and cultural leader. A regular contributor to The Guardian, their career spans criticism, curation, education, youth work, journalism and sculpture.

    00:00 Intro
    1:00 The personal toll of speaking out
    3:22 Discovering architecture
    6:47 Working at the Architecture Review
    10:51 Do architects see the value in writing and critique?
    13:51 Architecture Foundation and New Architecture Writers1
    5:37 Open City and Open House Festival
    21:20 The big wall between architecture and the public
    23:43 Architectural communication
    25:58 The protection of function
    29:10 Filmmaking and social media
    35:59 Going freelance
    37:28 Writing for the Guardian
    39:02 The future of the profession
    41:22 Advice for the aspiring architects
    43:10 Architecture school
    44:25 Persuading the mainstream media to talk about urban issues
    47:24 Do architects care about politics?
    52:15 The misguided public perception of architects
    53:27 Work and values
  • Bespoke Careers Podcast

    The Truth About Becoming An Architect - Lucy Carmichael

    10/02/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    Lucy Carmichael, former Director of Practice at the RIBA and current Board Member for the University of the Built Environment, explains why the traditional, linear path into the industry is failing most students, and what the alternative looks like.

    From her upbringing with architect parents, to navigating the "heyday" of design policy at CABE, Lucy has spent her life 'falling in and out of love with architecture.' The thing that keeps her coming back is the huge potential for positive impact on society.

    We explore the "radical realism" of the London School of Architecture, the looming impact of AI on graduate roles, and why the most impactful architectural careers are often the ones that look the least traditional.

    00:00 Intro
    00:56 Route into architecture
    5:48 The reality check: first jobs in architecture
    8:10 Stepping out of practice
    9:38 The CABE movement
    14:17 Communication and storytelling in architecture
    18:41 Director of Practice at the RIBA
    27:10 The profession's lack of engagement with the RIBA
    33:08 The school that works differently (joining the LSA)
    35:25 "Radical Realism" - the LSA ethos
    47:04 AI and the future of the education and the profession
    55:18 Has her career turned out how she imagined?
    57:54 Career advice for the next generation
  • Bespoke Careers Podcast

    How an 'Un-Hireable' Architecture Grad Built a World Famous Practice - Kathryn Gustafson

    27/01/2026 | 55 mins.
    Founder of Gustafson Porter + Bowman, Kathryn Gustafson reflects starting a studio in a second language, and learning the business side of practice through trial, mentors, and persistence.

    00:00 Intro
    0:59 Growing up in the desert
    2:35 Discovering design
    6:33 Journey from fashion to landscape architecture
    12:04 Business vs Art
    16:31 Founding her businesses and 'the invisible years.'
    25:47 How to be a good leader
    28:39 Building a workplace culture
    29:21 Key projects and dealing with criticism
    35:52 Navigating cultural contexts as a designer
    38:59 Key skills designers need
    41:05 Working with other designers: "Architects think they can do everything"
    43:31 The changing nature of landscapes
    47:58 Legacy
    49:36 The next generation of designers
  • Bespoke Careers Podcast

    "Architecture School Doesn't Prepare You For This!" How We Scaled BIG Globally - Kai-Uwe Bergmann

    12/01/2026 | 57 mins.
    Kai-Uwe Bergmann is a Partner at Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), where he leads global business development and oversees urban design and landscape projects. Known for his strategic approach to "the political scale," Bergmann has been instrumental in scaling BIG from a Copenhagen-founded practice into a global force operating in over 40 countries. He is a primary contributor to Manhattan’s "Big U," a 10-mile coastal resiliency project designed to protect the city from future climate events.

    BIG, often described as "pragmatic utopian," focuses on transforming complex societal challenges (from energy and food distribution to affordable housing) into opportunities for design innovation.

    Bergmann’s personal journey, spanning from a German upbringing to an apprenticeship in glassmaking and stone masonry, informs his belief that architecture is a "limitless" field that requires the investigative skills of a detective and the foresight of a strategist.

    0:00 Intro
    1:09 Why architecture?
    7:57 Glass-blowing, apprenticeships, and the value of experiences
    13:21 Meeting Bjarke: A 20-year collaboration
    17:43 Designing beyond election cycles
    20:51 BIG's stratospheric rise
    32:51 What architecture school doesn't teach you
    36:52 What should architects be doing more of?
    42:28 Scaling BIG and navigating the global scale
    47:48 Balancing work-life and family life
    49:48 The importance of architecture and the role of the architect
    51:24 Architecture as a hopeful act
  • Bespoke Careers Podcast

    Why Architects Are Losing Their Influence (And How to Regain It) – Chris Williamson

    02/01/2026 | 54 mins.
    On 1 January 2026, Chris Williamson took a deliberate and provocative step. He allowed his registration with the Architects Registration Board to lapse, describing the framework as 'absurd'.

    In practical terms, the sitting President of the RIBA, a practitioner with more than forty years’ experience and the founder of one of the UK’s most successful practices, can no longer legally call himself an architect.

    "Since I was 18 it's all I've ever wanted to do. But to be asked to pay an annual fee (which is increasing each year) to the ARB for the title - when the function isn't regulated seems madness."

    This conversation was filmed in the weeks leading up to that announcement. It captures Chris at a moment of conviction, before he went public with a decision that challenges how the UK regulates the built environment.

    As a working class kid, Chris was told architecture wasn’t for "the likes of him." Decades later, as RIBA President and co-founder of Weston Williamson + Partners, he's reshaped global cities through transport and infrastructure.

    If you are interested in how architecture survives the collision of technological shift, class barriers, commercial pressure, and declining influence - this is for you.

    0:00 Intro
    1:28 Chris' route into architecture
    4:55 Class and the barrier to professional entry
    6:37 Founding ⁨@wwparchitects⁩
    12:27 Why architects are losing influence
    14:31 Specialisim vs generalism
    19:14 In defence of competitions
    22:38 Partnerships, pressure and asking for help
    27:08 AI: can anyone be an architect now?
    30:19 Handing over WW+P to the next generation
    32:58 What do you want you legacy to be?
    36:56 How to fix architecture's influence problem
    41:10 What Chris is doing as RIBA President
    45:08 Why young architects aren't joining the RIBA
    49:17 Protection of function vs title
    52:21 What success as RIBA President looks like

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About Bespoke Careers Podcast

The Bespoke Careers Podcast brings you the career stories and insights from the people shaping architecture and design today. Tune in every two weeks for fresh conversations with designers, architects, and creatives from around the world, sharing insights, experiences, and the realities behind their professional journeys.
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