Fun Mills


The Interactive Adaptation of a Post-Industrial Economy


Fun Mills intends to revive the economy of the declining post-industrial town, Burnley in Lancashire, UK. Taking influence from Cedric Price’s proposed Fun Palace, this thesis explores how architecture might continue to flourish through society’s dependence on digital technology. 

Burnley was once England’s centre of cotton and wool production yet is now comprised of numerous vacant cotton mills that line the Leeds & Liverpool Canal. While the majority of prosperous cities in the UK have shifted their economies to high-tech knowledge industries, the predominant population of Burnley is trained in the manufacturing sector, lacking the education to move into a knowledge economy. 

This project proposes the transformation of unused cotton mills into a network of interactive textile labs, in order to bridge a sharing economy between manufacturing, knowledge, and service industries. Similar to notions of the Fun Palace, the buildings acknowledge indeterminacy by allowing reconfiguring forms to adapt to the continuous progression of science and technology.

Type — Academic

Degree MArch (Professional)

Course Graduate Thesis

Advisor Johan Voordouw

Completed May 2017

  • Faculty Choice Award Nomination

    Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, Carleton University
    Ottawa, Canada

    Maxwell Taylor Scholarship

    Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, Carleton University
    Ottawa, Canada

    Azrieli Award Nomination

    Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, Carleton University
    Ottawa, Canada

  • Thesis Tips & Advice from MArch Alumni: Part One

    Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, Carleton University
    Ottawa, Canada






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