Naturally all groups were in the workshop on the Moor at ridiculously early hours (some as early as 6am!), doing last minute checks and assembling to make sure everything would be ready for the afternoon. Before we could start transporting the various components the concrete team still had to sort the problem of the broken squares and pieces: we found that the desperately thrown together cement had held the Castles together well enough for them to be used in a game, even if they did look more like Medieval ruins than beautifully crafted designer chess pieces. Mike also popped to Wickes’ to secure some No More Nails to hold the red squares together. It wouldn’t stick them indefinitely, but it would allow them to be transported to the site where they could be held together by adjacent squares. We rejected the back-up Castles on the grounds that trying to paint them red wasn’t exactly the most elegant design solution.
To solve the problem of rough ground the team decided to lay the wooden boards that were used in the squares’ formwork on the ground, these would be covered by the concrete chessboard. The original plan was to lay the components of a bed of sand, but this would require several bags to brought, and our expenditure was already over £200! By late morning the components, pieces and squares both flawless and broken, were moved onto the site, the Concrete Space for Conversation was finally being assembled:
Meanwhile the project reports from each team headed off to the bandstand to put together the exhibition on Matter Reality. The goal of the exhibition was to show off to the public what the first Year’s at Sheffield School of Architecture had be doing for the past three weeks, with information on each ‘Space for Conversation’, the teams’ design processes, music, videos and free purple cakes!
After helping set up the exhibition Nick returned to the site to see how the chessboard was setting up, this is what he found:
After 3 weeks of making designs, arguing about designs, remaking designs, making concrete, smashing up concrete, illness, snow rain, lost valuables, 10 hour studio sessions, dust inhalation, shovelling induced backache, and hundreds of pounds of expenditure, our Concrete Space for Conversation was finally complete. Like some kind of giant Battenberg cake a red and white concrete chessboard now stood in the heart of the Moor, shoppers stopping to look through the English rain as they bustled between Debenhams at the top of the Moor and Atkinson’s at the bottom. Despite early reservations about the strength of the squares and the balance of the pieces, the board was fully functional with various students and even members of the general public joining in for games of chess!
The board certainly worked as a generator for conversation, with chess players advising each other on moves and elderly couples stopping by to wonder to each other what was going on. All that was left now was to see what the tutors made of it: luckily for us they approved the cracked squares and ruined castles, commenting that it looked like the entire board had been sourced out of some kind of archaeological dig, score! Gathering at the bandstand in the early afternoon the entire First Year viewed the exhibition before visiting each Space for Conversation, 8 in all, in succession. It was incredible to see how each group had responded to both the brief and the properties of their respective materials, pushing them in quite extraordinarily innovative ways.
By late afternoon it was time for the exhibition to come to end, the wind and rain conveniently ending with it. The final chess players were kicked off the chessboard so it could be disassembled and transported back to the studio. Each member of the team decided to take a piece (or three!) each as a souvenir, Telmo being shady enough to pinch the much coveted Queens whilst no-one else was around. This brings us to the end of the ‘Matter Reality’ project ‘, it had been a seriously intense three weeks, and we’re sure most of the public were not too keen on attending an architecture exhibition in the pouring rain, but it was clear that all teams were more than happy with what they had achieved. We feel the entire First Year seriously outdid themselves with this project, and would like to thank everyone who contributed and took interest.
Thanks for reading!
Team Concrete x





















































































