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Radical Rooms: Power of the plan

Inside Radical Rooms gallery with pink and green patterned curtains hanging from the ceiling

Radical Rooms: Power of the plan

28 April to 24 September 2022

Radical Rooms: Power of the plan is the RIBA's latest exhibition, created through a special partnership between architect Charles Holland and visual artist Di Mainstone.

This exhibition explores the power relations embedded within the layout of our domestic spaces. It uses stories from architectural history and highlights moments when the architectural plan has challenged or changed the conventions of domestic life. 

Exhibition opening times

Radical Rooms: Power of the Plan at 66 Portland Place, London is free to visit, and open throughout July and from the 5 to 24 September during the following hours:

  • Monday to Saturday - 10am to 5pm
  • Tuesday - 10am to 8pm
  • Sunday - Closed

Please note there is no need to make an appointment to visit within our opening hours.

Past events

About the exhibition

Spanning 500 years, the exhibition is anchored in three buildings from the 16th, 18th, and 20th centuries: Hardwick Hall, A la Ronde and the Hopkins House. Each present the profound role of women in their development and design, an influence that has persistently been left out of the history of architecture. These properties exemplify the way that power structures are rooted within the domestic plan, revealing the social relationships of their time.

Radical Rooms uses stories from architectural history and highlights moments when the plan has challenged the conventions of domestic life. With a layout inspired by the Palladian house plan, the exhibition forms an abstract grid of connected rooms defined by curtains and floor patterns. Animated and occupied by the four women, the architectural patrons of the three buildings, Bess of Hardwick, Jane and Mary Parminter and Patty Hopkins, these spaces share their stories through elaborate costume design and a music score that makes up an immersive audio-visual performance. 

Where Charles Holland draws attention to the power in the plan through the organisation of space, Di Mainstone focuses on the people, bringing to life four key characters and revealing their history and influence on the construction of the three domestic properties. A shared language of pattern, decoration and colour link the two together. Throughout the gallery, original drawings and artefacts from the RIBA Collections are hidden for the visitors to discover stories that have been largely overlooked. These exhibits present an alternative history of architects who have contributed radical ideas to designing and commissioning buildings, and developing domestic life, all by means of the architectural plan.

Material sponsor:

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