PERSONAL LEADERSHIP
During a two-day retreat in Stroud, we spent time considering our own leadership journey and the type of leader we want to be. It is rare we take time away from our phones, with no distractions, within nature. The quiet allowed us space to think and contemplate what is important to us. Following this period of reflection, I found myself volunteering to discuss my love of bricks at the showcase event in June.
‘A simple brick, may on the surface seem to not have much to do with leadership, but when I think about their qualities, there is strong correlation to what I consider important in a leader today.
They are one of the oldest, most traditional building materials, with a simple form. They are honest, they have integrity. A brick is not trying to be something it’s not.
They are inherently sustainable and adaptable, made of natural materials and can be re-claimed, re-used, re-cycled, even crushed and made into new bricks.’
As a child of two Doctors, I spent a lot of time in hospitals, GP surgeries, care homes, in waiting rooms, in staff rooms, in consultation rooms….and the feeling was often the same. These spaces made me feel ill, they had the opposite effect of what they were trying to do. My parents were there, trying to help people, trying to make people better but they were often doing this in spaces that were working against them.
They were trying to understand the building blocks of their patients, I wanted to understand the building blocks of the spaces themselves.
As a doctor studies the cells of the body, we need to look at the individual elements on their own to start to understand what spaces they can create.
What does this mean for a simple brick? When you consider a brick on its own, it is one thing….a door stop, a match lighter, a bookend…its dimensions have a ratio of 3:2:1 and that is where some of its hidden strength lies. It can fit together with other bricks, working as a team, to create countless combinations, endless opportunities.
It is reassuringly strong and yet versatile. It does the everyday, and the breathtaking. It does the hard graft of the bog-standard brick wall and then creates incredibly extravagant and delicate detailing on gothic churches.
When I think of the importance of architecture, it is about creating spaces that help the most people. For me, that comes down to homes. If you are able to create a home for someone where they feel safe and happy, it helps nurture every other aspect of their lives. That is where the strength in residential design lies.
For many people in the UK, when they imagine their homes, they imagine bricks and mortar, the bricks support a heritage, memories, while also allowing for a vision, allowing a person the space to dream.’
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
The programme was a fantastic way to reassess my own leadership and learn to prioritise what I consider important. In an ever-changing world, it allowed me to adapt and integrate the process of innovation, and the tools required, into my working life. It connected me to a powerful community of peers, developing long-term connections and hopefully a continued relationship with UKGBC through a dedicated alumni group called the Future Leadership Forum. The group allows us to continue to work together beyond the programme, sharing our experiences of sustainability leadership.
With the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) stating the symbolic limit of 1.5 degrees Celsius will almost certainly be breached and with a worrying roll back on green policies by the government, it is easy to feel defeated. However, my overwhelming takeaway from my time as a UKGBC Future Leader, is that we can be both outraged and optimistic. With innovation, ambition and united effort, we can make significant change. Our industry thrives on change, let’s seize the opportunity and perhaps consider the often-overlooked brick.
As leaders, do you share the qualities of an everyday brick? Are you honest and accountable? Are you adaptable and sustainable in your actions? Are you independent and yet collaborative? Are you strong and yet versatile? Do you allow space for your team to create memories while allowing them the space to dream? So, I challenge you, Future Leaders, to go to the office tomorrow and think, what would a brick do?