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De Rosee Sa Architects launch podcast series focused on the UK property market

Architecture and interior practice De Rosee Sa has launched a new podcast series speaking to Property Developers, Land Agents and Estate Agents.

In this series of podcast episodes, Max De Rosee discusses how the property industry has changed over the last few years and what we can expect from the coming years. Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts and all other major platforms, the podcast provides some insight for trade and consumers interested in understanding more about UK property.

De Rosee Sa is an architecture and design practice in Notting Hill, London. They have built a reputation for designing imaginative and well-considered schemes spanning the residential, educational, retail and community sectors.

All episodes are available to listen to at deroseesa.com/podcast. In the series, Max De Rosee is joined by:

  • Rob Atkins, co-founder and director of Domus Nova an independent state agency specialising in exceptional properties. And when we say exceptional, we really mean exceptional. There are some fantastic properties and as a result, Domus Nova attracts a particular type of clientele.
  • Ben Warren, director of Regency Grove Property Consultants. They are a dynamic Property Consultancy focusing on Quantity Surveying, Project Management, Building Consultancy and Project/Development Monitoring services.
  • James Armstrong, founder and managing director, and Stephen Hunt, finance director of Ideal Land, Land Acquisition and Sourcing Agency. They discuss challenges and opportunities for residential property development.
  • Philippa Stockley: writer, award-winning journalist, novelist, art historian and painter.  They discuss contemporary and historic methods for construction and what the future could hold for buildings.

‘Artists set the pace, whether it’s visual arts, particularly in literature. You can think of comic books of the 1950s where you had geodesic domes, futuristic buildings, great pointy high buildings. Those, 20 or 30 years later, tend to filter down into general life. Therefore, there is a moral duty, perhaps you could say, of practical artists and architects to not jump too fast to their stages because the people following behind have got to inhabit the buildings, do need the meaning, do need the comfort of comprehension and understanding of their environment that you’re describing’ – Philippa Stockley