The Architectural Association (AA) holds several exhibitions throughout the year in the AA Gallery, Front Members' Room, the AA Bar and at Montague Street. All of the AA's exhibitions are open to the public and are curated by the AA Public Programme to cover a wide range of topics including, but not limited to, architecture, history, community, construction, nature and the environment. The AA Gallery is located on the ground floor of 36 Bedford Square, it is a versatile and accessible space that hosts several exhibitions a year, while the AA Front Members' Room is often a space displaying the work of students, staff and alumni.
Hours
Please visit exhibition listed below for hours.
Location
Please visit exhibition listed below for location.
Contact
publicprogramme@aaschool.ac.uk
Le Liégat, Ivry-sur-Seine, Sacha Trouiller / NVBL ArchitectsRenée Gailhoustet: A thousand and one ways of living is free to visit in the AA Front Members' Room and Bar on the first floor of 36 Bedford Square, from 16 January–21 March 2026, Monday to Saturday, 11am–7pm GMT.
The celebrated French architect Renée Gailhoustet (1929–2023) created pioneering masterplans and social housing projects in the Parisian suburbs. Rejecting rigid typologies and modernist ideals of uniformity and standardisation, she designed collective yet noble and bespoke housing that featured a characteristic generosity of space and use of raised terraces. In the words of the former French Minister of Culture Rima Abdul Malak, Gailhoustet’s architecture offers ‘a thousand and one ways of inhabiting our world’.
Building on work completed during the Royal Academy of Arts 2023 Residency, architect, NVBL director and AA Intermediate 15 unit tutor Nichola Barrington-Leach reflects on Gailhoustet's work in a 1:1 scale installation of a series of apartment floor plans from Gailhoustet’s Le Liégat housing project in Ivry-sur-Seine. The exhibition brings together additional drawings, spatial study models by NVBL, as well as photographs by Sacha Trouiller and Valerie Sadoun. Together, they invite us to consider how Gailhoustet’s ambitious, generous and adaptable buildings created unique places to live, and embody principles for designing and living that we can learn from today.
The exhibition precedes the release of Renée Gailhoustet, a new book edited by Nichola Barrington-Leach and published by AA Publications, which brings together several voices to celebrate Gailhoustet's architecture. The publication is available to pre-order from the AA Bookshop (publication date late March 2026).
Renée Gailhoustet (1929–2023) dedicated her career to creating social housing in Paris’ suburbs, developing projects such as Ivry-sur-Seine, îlot Basilique Saint Denis and La Maladrerie. She lived and worked in Le Liégat, in Ivry-sur-Seine, for over 40 years. Born in Algeria, she moved to Paris to study philosophy but eventually chose to study architecture at the École des Beaux-Arts. She was chief architect of Ivry-sur-Seine, working closely with Raymonde Laluque, director of the Office for Social Housing and Urbanism. In her lifetime she built over 1500 homes.
Nichola Barrington-Leach is an architect, educator and the founder of NVBL Architects, a practice focused on environmentally conscious design and research. She was awarded the Royal Academy of Arts Renée Gailhoustet Residency in 2023, and her ongoing research on Gailhoustet will form the basis of a monograph to be published by AA Publications in 2026. Her projects and research have been exhibited internationally, including at the Royal Academy, the Venice Biennale, Clerkenwell Design Week and the Guangzhou Triennial. She currently teaches at the AA as an Intermediate 15 unit tutor.
Please get in touch to let us know of any access requirements that you might have and how we can best accommodate these by emailing publicprogramme@aaschool.ac.uk. We apologise that there is no step-free access to the first floor, where this exhibition is on display.