An Architect's Perspective - podcast cover

An Architect's Perspective

James Hamilton Architectsjameshamiltonarchitects.com
An Architect's Perspective
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Can a building hold a conversation?

In this final episode of the series, I sit down with architect, author, and educator Per Olaf Fjeld , a former student and close friend of Sverre Fehn . Our conversation explores not just Fehn’s work, but his worldview — his belief that architecture is a continuous negotiation between memory and modernity, material and metaphor. Per Olaf offers a rare first-hand insight into Fehn’s creative process: how he thought, how he taught, and how he worked. Together, we revisit the Storhamar Barn , but a...

Jun 09, 202647 minEp. 17

Sverre Fehn's architecture of memory

Today we’re in Hamar, Norway, to explore one of the most powerful architectural interventions of the last century: Sverre Fehn’s museum within the ruins of Storhamar Barn. To guide us through it, I’m joined by architect and writer Per Olaf Fjeld, who worked closely with Fehn and has written extensively on his legacy. Storhamar is not a restoration. It’s an architectural conversation across centuries. Rather than rebuilding the medieval barn, Fehn inserted a timber and concrete structure inside i...

Jun 02, 202618 minEp. 16

The steely stillness of Skywood House

Welcome back to An Architect’s Perspective . I’m James Hamilton, and in this episode, we explore Skywood House - a landmark of minimalist architecture by Graham Phillips, completed in 1999. Tucked into the English countryside, Skywood House is built entirely from glass, concrete, and steel. But its impact isn’t about materials. It’s about mood. This is minimalism as atmosphere: a house of light and silence. Walking through the house, I reflect on what makes it work. How do you design restraint? ...

May 26, 202631 minEp. 15

The modernist buildings of India

I’m James Hamilton, and in this episode, we turn our attention to B. V. Doshi — one of India’s most revered architects, and the first from the country to win the Pritzker Prize. This conversation took place in 2018, at his home in Ahmedabad. What unfolded was more than a professional interview. It was a rare, personal insight into the philosophy and life story of a man who saw architecture not just as construction, but as culture. Doshi speaks about his early years working with Le Corbusier and ...

May 19, 202611 minEp. 14

The most radical cricket stadium in India

This is a conversation about more than just sports architecture. It’s about the intersection of land, politics, and public life. Correa’s stadium doesn’t dominate its site—it rests lightly on it, more pavilion than monument. It invites people in, rather than fencing them out. And it’s shaped as much by the climate as it is by the culture. We’re in Ahmedabad, at the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Stadium, designed by Charles Correa in the early 1980s. It’s one of his most radical works—at once minimal,...

May 12, 202640 minEp. 13

Nondita Mehrotra on Correa's living legacy

I’m James Hamilton, and in this episode, we explore a building that transcends architecture to touch on something far deeper: dignity, restraint, and national memory. We’re in Ahmedabad, India, at the Gandhi Ashram - designed by Charles Correa, one of the most influential figures in tropical modernism. And joining me is Nondita Mehrotra, an architect and academic whose life and work intersect closely with Correa’s legacy. What does it mean to build a space that honours a life like Gandhi’s? How ...

May 05, 202641 minEp. 12

What does it mean to build with humility?

In this episode, I sit down with Neelkanth Chhaya , architect and academic, to talk about the Gandhi Memorial Museum - and how Charles Correa embedded Gandhi’s values into its very form. We explore how the building reflects humility through materials, structure, and sequencing - and how it echoes the Indian tradition of open courtyards and sky as a central space. Neelkanth shares both personal insights and a grounded analysis of what makes the Ashram feel so profound. Key Topics: ● Gandhi’s phil...

Apr 28, 202626 minEp. 11

Charles Correa and the birth of tropical modernism

I visit Ahmedabad to explore the life and work of Charles Correa , a pioneering voice in post-independence Indian architecture. We look at how Correa translated modernist ideas into a distinctly Indian language — rooted in climate, tradition, and civic purpose. From the Gandhi Memorial Museum to his urban design legacy, Correa’s work reveals how architecture can be both modern and deeply local. This is an episode about climate, ethics, and the power of spatial restraint. Host Info James Hamilton...

Apr 21, 202616 minEp. 10

The woman who almost got written out of architectural history

I sit down with Spanish architect and academic Carmen Espegel to explore the life and work of Eileen Gray , with a particular focus on the complexities of authorship, identity, and gender within architectural history. Carmen offers an incisive reading of Villa E-1027 not just as a physical space, but as an architectural manifesto — one where form, emotion, and politics are deeply intertwined. We discuss Gray’s design intelligence, her artistic independence, and the cultural dynamics that led to ...

Apr 14, 202642 minEp. 9

Was Le Corbusier the villain of this story?

I’m joined by architectural historian Tim Benton for an in-depth look at Eileen Gray’s Villa E-1027, and what her design says about modernism at its most intimate. Tim was one of the first scholars to seriously document and interpret Gray’s work, and he brings decades of insight to our conversation. We unpack how Villa E-1027 challenges the rationalist model of modernism, replacing rigidity with rhythm, softness, and a careful choreography of light and movement. Along the way, we discuss issues ...

Apr 07, 202640 minEp. 8

Eileen Gray's radical house on the Riviera

In this episode, I visit Villa E-1027 , the seaside house designed by Eileen Gray and built in 1929 on the Côte d’Azur. Known for its sensuality and quiet radicalism, the house challenges many assumptions of early modernism — especially its relationship to the body, to comfort, and to intimacy. Unlike the “machines for living in” of her male contemporaries, Gray’s design is deeply personal, profoundly tactile, and structurally inventive. From the pivoting screens to the custom furniture, every d...

Mar 31, 202619 minEp. 7

Can architecture be both strict and sensual?

In this episode of An Architect’s Perspective , I’m joined by architect and designer Eva Jiřičná to revisit Villa Tugendhat , Mies van der Rohe’s 1930 masterwork in Brno. We explore how the house’s radical openness, material refinement, and structural precision helped shape the language of early modernism - and how its influence continues to ripple through contemporary architecture. Eva reflects on her visits to the house, her Czech roots, and what Mies’s architecture taught her about space, cla...

Mar 24, 202640 minEp. 6

Inside Mies van der Rohe's iconic Villa Tugendhat

This episode of An Architect’s Perspective takes you directly inside Villa Tugendhat , Mies van der Rohe’s landmark of early modernism, completed in 1930 in Brno, Czech Republic. It’s a house that stripped away ornament and introduced a new kind of spatial order — radical in its time, and still breathtaking today. I walk the site, tracing how Mies used structure, material, and movement to create a home of extraordinary grace. The famous retractable glass wall, the flowing interior plan, and the ...

Mar 17, 202618 minEp. 5

Inside Richard Rogers' most personal work

In this episode, I sit down with Ab Rogers , designer and son of Richard Rogers , to revisit the house he grew up in - Wimbledon House , a prototype of high-tech modernism designed by his father in 1968. This conversation moves between memory and material. Ab shares what it was like to live inside a building that was also an architectural experiment - a modular steel frame dropped into a garden, with transparent walls and exposed services. We talk about what the house meant then, and how it feel...

Mar 10, 202635 minEp. 4

Inside Wimbledon House and the invention of high-tech modernism

I visit Wimbledon House — a quiet prototype that helped define the high-tech modernist movement . Designed by Richard Rogers in 1968 as a home for his parents, this isn’t a flashy building. But it’s radical in its restraint. Steel frame, panelled infill, exposed systems — a house built like a kit-of-parts, dropped into a leafy London suburb. It’s modular, demountable, and endlessly adaptable. But it’s also deeply personal. Wimbledon House translates the principles of industrial logic into the in...

Mar 03, 202619 minEp. 3

The house built without drawings - John Pardey on Can Lis

I’m James Hamilton, and in this episode I’m joined by architect and writer John Pardey to revisit one of the quietest, most profound acts of modern architecture: Can Lis . Perched on a cliff in Mallorca, Jørn Utzon’s retreat is built entirely from local stone and light. It’s a project that came after personal and professional collapse — after Utzon walked away from the Sydney Opera House. But what he created here wasn’t a statement. It was a response. Can Lis was a house designed without drawing...

Feb 24, 202641 minEp. 2

Can Lis and the quiet power of vernacular modernism

What do you build after the Sydney Opera House? For Jørn Utzon, it was Can Lis - a quiet, elemental retreat on the cliffs of Mallorca that redefined modern architecture. In this episode, architect James Hamilton visits Utzon’s home to explore how vernacular materials, sunlight, and silence shaped one of the 20th century’s most poetic buildings. With a special interview from architect John Pardey — who knew Utzon personally — we uncover how this house changed the direction of modernism by rooting...

Feb 17, 202617 minEp. 1

Welcome To 'An Architect's Perspective'

Ever wondered how 20th century modernist architecture shaped the world? From cliffside retreats to high-tech homes, the visual podcast “An Architect’s Perspective” is your front-row seat to the 20th century’s most influential architecture. Join architect James Hamilton as he travels the globe, unlocking the stories behind modernism’s most iconic buildings with the people who know them best. Walk through Jørn Utzon’s Can Lis, stand inside Mies van der Rohe’s Villa Tugendhat, and experience Charle...

Feb 16, 20261 min
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android