Won a Clarks Limited Attachment Award worth £2500 under the the 'Footwear' brief in the 'Fashion and Accessories' section. Worked with Clarks International.
Won an Attachment Award to a member company of the British Ceramic Manufacturers' Federation worth £1500 under the 'Co-ordinated Ranges' brief in the 'Ceramics' section. Spent ten weeks working with Poole Pottery.
Won a Travel Award of £350 in the 'Fashion Fabrics' section.
Won the Dorma Group Attachment Award of £800 under the 'Hippie Patch' brief in the 'Home Furnishing' section. Worked with Dorma for four weeks. Includes a letter to the RSA.
Won a Travel Award worth £500 and a further £500 to develop his project under the the 'New Design for Old' brief in the 'Consumer Products' section. Includes letter to the Society.
Won Travel Award worth £700 under the the 'Packaging for Museum Gifts' brief in the 'Leisure & Retail' sector. Travelled to Spain. Photocopy of original report.
Part of image used to illustrate correspondence on education
Includes copies of regular updates on project
Background to the RSA's history
Grenville Davey worked with landscape architects EDAW on a collaboration to develop proposals for the restoration and refurbishment of the neglected dock and its adjacent areas. These included the creation of informal seating areas and improvements to an existing play area. The principal objective of the development is to enhance public access to, and awareness of, the river. The project was completed in 1997. Client: London Docklands Development Corporation. Award value £10,000.
Papers from the New Zealand Chapter between 1989-1997
Correspondence, Notes from meetings, Minutes of Meetings, Committee Nominations, Guidelines for International Committees and Honorary Corresponding Members (Aims, Responsibilities and Structure), Booklets
The current work of the Chapter is focused around the Regenerative Futures programme, which aims to create a future where humans thrive as part of the Earth’s ecology.
This work has three pillars: climate change, inclusive economies, and indigenous wisdom.
Royal Society of Arts