AA director Eva Franch i Gilabert suffers vote of no confidence

Eva Franch i Gilabert

Director of the Architectural Association Eva Franch i Gilabert has lost a vote of confidence as students and staff at the UK school voted down her five-year plan for the institution, prompting outrage from academics and architects.

On 29 June, 80 per cent of the Architectural Association (AA) community members voted against Franch i Gilabert’s strategy plan for 2020 to 2025, according to a report in the Architects’ Journal.

A vote of no confidence in the director was also passed narrowly by 52 per cent.

The school is run on a democratic model that sees its staff, students and governing council make decisions by ballot.

Council to discuss next steps 

In a statement, the AA said that it was a standard process for the school.

“The AA has a long tradition of self-determination through its school community and is proud to have as part of its constitution a mechanism to facilitate discussion and debate and to vote on significant matters regarding the AA’s future and direction,” the AA said.

While the school’s council is not bound to the results, the 14-member body will now meet to go through their options.

“Council recognises the heart of the AA lies in its democratic principles and welcomes the advice of the school community expressed through its meeting and voting mechanisms to inform the governance and leadership of the association,” the AA continued in its statement.

“The outcomes of the school community meeting have now been passed to council for discussion.”

Academics rally in support of Franch i Gilabert

However, in response to the vote of no confidence, supporters of Franch i Gilabert from outside of the Architectural Association (AA), including academics Beatriz Colomina and Mark Wigley, SO-IL founders Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu, Forensic Architecture founder Eyal Weizman, and the dean of the Royal College of Art’s architecture school Adrian Lahoud wrote an open letter to the institution’s council.

In the letter, they warned that removing her as the director would “jeopardise an institution of seminal cultural and pedagogical importance to become the subject of media frivolity”.

Voting down the first female director of the AA is a symptom of society’s inherent misogyny, claim her supporters.

“Eva Franch is the youngest elected female director of the AA,” said the letter.

“Systemic biases against women – and particularly young women – in positions of power continue to plague academic and corporate environments,” the letter continues.

“As in politics, strong women that take direct and immediate action to address crises are often criticized extensively, while men enforcing similar actions are seen as effective and decisive leaders,” they added.

“The question of sexism seems obvious in the recent ‘vote of no confidence’.”

Additionally, the letter accused the AA of using “the pandemic for anti-democratic purposes” by passing a motion of no confidence against the backdrop of coronavirus and the anti-racism protests.

Institution continues a tumultuous period

Franch i Gilabert took over as director of the AA in 2018.  In her post-election interview with Dezeen, the Catalan architect said she believes architecture education needs a shake-up to keep pace with the outside world.

“Architects and architecture institutions have either become too satisfied with commonplace formulations such as sustainability, participation, and bottom-up practices, or too hermetic with self-proclaimed avant-gardism and meta-discursive narrative with an aesthetic devoid of any social or political currency,” Franch i Gilabert said in 2018.

Franch i Gilabert was elected to the directorship at a contentious time for the institution, which is based in London and counts Richard Rogers and the late Zaha Hadid among its alumni.

Interim director Samantha Hardingham made controversial cuts to the publishing and exhibitions departments.

These redundancies were made ahead of the school undergoing a financial audit as part of the process of applying for degree-awarding powers ahead of Brexit. But industry figures including Rem Koolhaas and Richard Rogers protested Hardingham’s decision, accused her of risking the school’s cultural legacy.

In October 2019 the AA was granted Taught Degree Awarding Powers (TDAP) as Franch i Gilabert welcomed a “new era” for the school.

Main image via Wikimedia Commons.

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