Abbreviation | GIA |
---|---|
Predecessor | Gold Coast Society of Architects |
Formation | 1962 |
Type | Professional society |
Purpose | Advancement of architectural education, practice and accreditation |
Location | |
Region served | Ghana |
Official language | English |
Website | GIA |
The Ghana Institute of Architects (GIA) is a professional society for architects and built environment affiliates located in Accra, Ghana. [3] [4] The first professional body in independent Ghana, it was registered in 1962 and inaugurated in December 1964 as a self-governing and fully indigenous institution to advance the architectural practice, education and accreditation in the country. [3] [4] [5] The Institute is the successor to the pre-independence Gold Coast Society of Architects, a colonial social club for Gold Coast-based architects founded in August 1954. [3] [4] [6] [7] The first president of the Ghana Institute of Architects was Theodore Shealtiel Clerk (1909–1965), the first formally trained, professionally certified Ghanaian architect and an award-winning urban planner who designed, planned and developed the harbour city of Tema. [8]
In 1963, approximately fifteen pioneer Ghanaian architects who had trained in the United Kingdom and the United States met to officially plan and formalise the architectural practice, education and accreditation through a professional institution, the Ghana Institute of Architects (GIA) as the successor to Gold Coast Society of Architects (GCSA), a social club for Gold Coast-based architects founded between July and August 1954 during the British colonial era. [3] [4] These architects included T. S. Clerk, D. K. Dawson, J. S. K. Frimpong, P. N. K., Turkson, J. Owusu-Addo, O. T. Agyeman, A. K. Amartey, E. K. Asuako, W. S. Asamoah, M. Adu-Donkor, K. G. Kyei, C. Togobo, V. Adegbite, M. Adu Bedu and E. Kingsley Osei. [3] [4] [9] T. S. Clerk was appointed the sole architect at that meeting to draft the first constitution of the Institute. [6] He subsequently submitted his proposals and the constitutional draft and its by-laws he authored were discussed, approved and adopted. [6]
The founding members of the erstwhile GCSA were mostly British expatriate architects who were employees of the colonial civil service and attached to the Public Works Department (P.W.D.). [6] This group consisted of G. S. Knight (President), Arthur Lindsay (Honorary Secretary), B. A. W Trevallion, (Honorary Treasurer), Kenneth M. Scott (Hon. Public Relations Officer), E.W Williamson, A. Williamson, Max Garlach, G. C. Harris, A.K Sulton, M. R. Griffiths, K. Wood, H. J. Pine, G.P Smith and L.P Williams. [6] The GCSA meetings were held at the International Club located on the Knutsford Avenue in Accra. [6] Concurrently, a pre-independence indigenous architectural association, the Space Club was set up by other Western-trained Ghanaian professionals. [6] This crop of early Ghanaian architects also doubled as external examiners and guest lecturers at the Department of Architecture at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Kumasi. [3] [4] In modern times, in addition to KNUST, GIA professionals are also involved with professional development programmes at the architecture school at Central University (Ghana). [4]
The Institute's official inaugural ceremony was on Friday 11 December 1964 at 20:30 GMT at the Commonwealth Hall of the University of Ghana, Legon. [3] [4] [6] The first executives were inducted during the event with Theodore S. Clerk being elected the first president of the Ghana Institute of Architects, after which he gave his acceptance speech. Earlier, T. S. Clerk had been the president of the Gold Coast Society of Architects. [3] [4] [8] Other first officers of the Institute elected include P.N.K. Turkson, (Vice-President), Victor Adegbite (Honorary Treasurer), O.T. Agyeman (Honorary Secretary), J.S.K Frimpong, John Owusu-Addo, W.S. Asamoah, E.K. Asuako, A.K. Amartey and M. Adu-Donkor as Members. [6] E.K. Bensah, the then Minister of Works and Housing was the Chairman of the inaugural event, assisted by Nana Kobina Nketia IV, Director, Institute of Art and Culture, R.P. Baffour, Vice-Chancellor, KNUST and G.Y. Odoi, Managing Director, Ghana National Construction Corporation. [6] The first Fellowships of the GIA were conferred on E.K. Bensah, R.P Baffour, L. K. Apaloo and G.Y. Odoi. [6] The Ghana Police Band provided music for the occasion. [6]
The GIA has the backing of the Government of Ghana, through the edict, Architects Decree, NLCD 357, of 1969. [6] [10] The Ghana Institute of Architects is a member of the African Union of Architects, Commonwealth Association of Architects and the International Union of Architects. [6] The Institute holds Annual General Meetings (AGM) to elect its executives who form the Institute's Council. [11] The members of the Council also belong to the Ghana Chamber of Construction Industry, the regulator of Ghanaian construction industry in Ghana. [10] The Ghana Institute of Architects Membership Charter states: [12]
No person shall practice in Ghana as an architect unless he is properly registered with the Ghana Institute of Architects to practice as such.
- Membership of the Institute shall be opened to all qualified Architects practicing in Ghana as individuals, or within unincorporated groups and corporate bodies.
- Membership shall comprise the following classes:
The Council may, subject to the approve of the Institute, elect from time to time as Hon. Fellows persons eminent in public life of this Country or elsewhere, not professionally engaged in the Practice of Architecture, who have shown exceptional interest matters relating to Architecture and Planning. The number of honorary fellows shall not at any one time exceed 5% of the corporate members of this class.Every Honorary Fellow shall be entitled to use after his or her name the initials Hon. F.G.I.A. i.e. Honorary Fellow of the Ghana Institute of Architects.
Honorary Associates:'The Council may, subject to the approval of the Institute, elect from time to time as Honorary Associates persons who have not professionally engaged in the practice of Architecture but have distinguished themselves in other professions or other fields of learning or have shown exceptional interest in matters relating to Architecture and Town Planning or have rendered commendable service to the Institute.The number of Honorary Associates shall not at any time exceed 5% of the number of the corporate members of this class.Every Honorary Associate shall be entitled to use after his or her name the initials Hon. A.G.I.A i.e. Honorary Associate of the Institute of Architects.
Probationers shall be persons who have passed the appropriate qualifying examinations but who have not completed their practical training or passed the Professional Practice Examination of the Institute.
Every Fellow and Associate shall upon registration be entitled to obtain
The founding of the colonial architectural society, the Gold Coast Society of Architects had ties to the establishment of the School of Architecture, Building Technology and Planning at the KNUST in 1952 when a feasibility team made up of British, German and American architects and academics arrived in the country. [3] The committee included Britons, Charles Hobbis, Tafi Evans and Miles Danby; German professor, Lutz Christians who lived and lectured at the KNUST until 1970s, and American Labelle Prussin who wrote the first book on architecture in Ghana “Architecture of Northern Ghana” and was among a group that designed the housing units for displaced communities arising from the construction of the Akosombo Dam project on the Volta Lake. [3] Prussin then worked with the Housing and Planning Department of the Faculty of Architecture at KNUST and later became a professor of architecture at an American university. [3]
Under British rule, public building projects in the Gold Coast colony were designed by British architects. These projects include the design of the University of Ghana's classical Mediterranean buildings led by a Cyprus-based British architectural firm; Supreme Court of Ghana buildings, the Old Parliament House and the General Post Office in Accra. [3] The Movenpick Hotel (previously known as the Ambassador Hotel) in Accra and the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital in Kumasi were both designed by Paton, a licentiate of the Royal Institute of British Architects. [3] During the colonial period, Gold-Coast-based British architectural firms included Kenneth Scott and Partners; Nickson and Boris as well as James Cubitt, Scott and Partners that designed the Mechanical Engineering Workshop building of the KNUST. Other British architects who were practitioners of the then nascent academic field of “tropical architecture” were Jane Drew and Max Fry who designed the buildings of Bechem Teacher Training College in the Tano South District of the Brong Ahafo Region in addition to those at the Prempeh College and the Opoku Ware School, both in Kumasi. [3]
During the Kwame Nkrumah administration in the 1950s, several architectural engineers were sent to the newly independent Ghana by Yugoslavia’s Josip Broz Tito as a sign of friendship between the two nations. [3] These architects from the former Eastern Bloc designed buildings using an international modernist approach which was considered globally trendy in that period. [3] Such building designs included the Vice Chancellor's Lodge and the Senior Staff Club at the KNUST as well as various halls of residence at the KNUST such as Unity Hall, the eight-storey annex blocks of the Independence, Republic, Queen's and University (Katanga) Halls. [3]
In 1960, Kwame Nkrumah appointed Theodore Clerk, the GIA’s first president as the Chief Architect of the then newly created Tema Development Corporation (TDC) to develop the satellite city of Tema. When Clerk was elevated to the position of the chief executive officer of the corporation, another Ghanaian pioneer architect and GIA co-founder, Victor Adegbite became the chief architect of the TDC. [3] The American architect, Max Bond who returned to his homeland after the 1966 coup d’état, designed Bolgatanga Regional Library. [13] Bond later taught and worked in architecture schools in New York and was instrumental in the design of the Martin Luther King Centre in Atlanta, Georgia and the new African-American Museum in Washington, D.C. John Owusu Addo, a professor at the Department of Architecture at the KNUST and also the first Ghanaian native to head the department. [3] For about twenty years, Anthony D. C. Hyland and William “Bill” Hill also taught in the same department. The German architect, Hannah Schreckenbach [14] worked at the Public Works Department (PWD) and the Architectural & Engineering Services Limited [15] (AESL) before joining the faculty at the Department of Architecture at the KNUST in the 1970s. [13] Schreckenbach wrote a construction design textbook still used by students of architecture. [3] In 1977, the GIA took part in the general strike and withdrawal of services by the Professional Bodies Association of Ghana, of which the GIA was a member. [6]
Yaw Asante, the only non-architect to become architecture department chair at the KNUST supervised the expansion of department's infrastructure using the then novel idea of “internally generated funds”. [3] The building designed under his tenure is currently used as the sixth-year architectural design studio for the M. Arch II programme which has replaced the former postgraduate diploma. [3] In 2012, under the auspices of the KNUST, ArchiAfrika, a network connecting architectural scholars and professionals in the built environment, launched the ArchiAfrika Educational Network, a partnership of architecture schools across the African continent. [16]
The development of Accra was spearheaded by an early Ghanaian architect of the Ghana Institute of Architects, David Wilberforce Kwame Dawson. Born on 6 February 2009. he was one of four architects at independence in 1957. [17] Initially trained as a sanitary health inspector, he joined the Sekondi-Takoradi Municipal Council. Gifted in technical drawing, his superiors transferred him to the Drawing Office of the Railway and Harbour Administration as a draughtsman. [17] He studied by correspondence at Bennet College in England before winning a colonial scholarship in 1944 to Leeds University where he graduated in architecture in 1946. He became an Associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects later that year. He returned to Accra in 1948 and became an Assistant Town Planning Officer at the Public Works Department, where he designed the Roof Loan Scheme. [17] Dawson became the Director of Rural Housing in 1956 and working in tandem with Ghana's first leader, Kwame Nkrumah, R. P. Baffour, the first Vice Chancellor of the KNUST, engineer, J. S. Annan and others he contributed to rural development, architecture and town planning. [17]
The following individuals have served as President of the Ghana Institute of Architects (GIA): [6]
President | Tenure of office |
---|---|
T. S. Clerk | 1962–65 |
Victor Adegbite | 1965–70 |
Kenneth Scott | 1970–71 |
O. T. Agyeman | 1971–74 |
Martin Adu-Badu | 1974–76 |
John Owusu-Addo | 1976–77 |
Courage Togobo | 1977–78 |
K. G. Kyei | 1978–79 |
D. S. Kpodo-Tay | 1979–80 |
E. L. Akita | 1980–82 |
J. N. A. Attoh / Oko Adjetey | 1982–88 |
M. K Boohene | 1988–90 |
O. T. Agyeman | 1990–93 |
H. D. L Yartey | 1993–95 |
Theo Akofio-Sowah | 1995–98 |
Kenneth Ampratum | 1998–02 |
Steve Akuffo | 2003–07 |
Nii Osah Odamtten | 2007–10 |
Osei Kwami Agyeman | 2010–13 |
Adotei Brown | 2013–14 |
Joseph E. Hayford | 2014–18 |
Richard Nii Dadey | 2018–19 |
Kofi Owusu | 2019–20 |
S.M. Quartey | 2020–22 |
Foster Osae Akonnor | 2022- |
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), commonly known as UST, Tech or Kwame Tech, is a public university located in Kumasi, Ashanti region, Ghana. The university focuses on science and technology. It is the second public university established in the country, as well as the largest university in the Ashanti Region of Ghana.
The Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum and Memorial Park is located in downtown Accra, the capital of Ghana. Over the years, the park has attracted visitors from around the world, with an annual count of approximately 98,000 individuals who visit to pay homage to Ghana's first President, and learn about his life and legacy. As one of the top 10 most visited sites in the country, the park holds immense cultural and historical significance.
The Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences (GAAS) is a learned society for the arts and sciences based in Accra, Ghana. The institution was founded in November 1959 by Kwame Nkrumah with the aim to promote the pursuit, advancement and dissemination of knowledge in all branches of the sciences and the humanities.
The College of Art and Built Environment came into existence in January 2005 in Kumasi, Ghana, as part of the restructuring of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology into a Collegiate System. In the restructuring, the Faculty of Environmental and Development studies (FEDS) and the Institute of Land Management and Development (ILMAD) were merged to form the college.
Charles Odamtten Easmon or C. O. Easmon, popularly known as Charlie Easmon, was a medical doctor and academic who became the first Ghanaian to formally qualify as a surgeon specialist and the first Dean of the University of Ghana Medical School. Easmon performed the first successful open-heart surgery in Ghana in 1964, and modern scholars credit him as the "Father of Cardiac Surgery in West Africa". Easmon was of Sierra Leone Creole, Ga-Dangme, African-American, Danish, and Irish ancestry and a member of the distinguished Easmon family, a Sierra Leone Creole medical dynasty of African-American descent.
Optometry is a relatively new field in eye care in Ghana.
The Department of Optometry at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, is based in Kumasi, Ghana. Its placement is under the College of Science of the university. It is the smallest department of the college with 10 teaching staff and around 210 students
Kwasi Kwarfo Adarkwa is a Ghanaian academic and the a past Vice Chancellor of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST). In 2008, he was selected by then President of Ghana, John Kufuor, for a national award in the field of academics.
Emmanuel Evans-AnfomFRCSEd FICS FAAS FWACS was a Ghanaian physician, scholar, university administrator, and public servant who served as the second Vice Chancellor of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology from 1967 to 1973.
Robert Patrick Baffour,, was a Ghanaian engineer, politician and university administrator who served as the first Vice Chancellor of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST). He was also a pioneer in engineering education in Ghana.
Francis Kofi Ampenyin Allotey was a Ghanaian mathematical physicist. Together with Daniel Afedzi Akyeampong, he became the first Ghanaian to obtain a doctorate in mathematical sciences, earned in 1966.
The Clerk family is a Ghanaian historic family that produced a number of pioneering scholars and clergy on the Gold Coast. Predominantly based in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, the Clerks were traditionally Protestant Christian and affiliated to the Presbyterian Church. The Clerk family is primarily a member of the Ga coastal people of Accra and in addition, has Euro-Afro-Caribbean heritage, descending from Jamaican, German and Danish ancestry.
Theodore Shealtiel Clerk, was an urban planner on the Gold Coast and the first formally trained, professionally certified Ghanaian architect. Attaining a few historic firsts in his lifetime, Theodore Clerk became the chief architect, city planner, designer and developer of Tema which is the metropolis of the Tema Harbour, the largest port in Ghana. The first chief executive officer (CEO) of the Ghanaian parastatal, the Tema Development Corporation as well as a presidential advisor to Ghana's first Head of State, Kwame Nkrumah, T. S. Clerk was a founding member and the first president of the first post-independent, wholly indigenous and self-governing Ghanaian professional body, the Ghana Institute of Architects (GIA), that had its early beginnings in 1963. He was also an Associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects and the Royal Town Planning Institute.
Atta Kwami was a Ghanaian painter, printmaker, independent art historian and curator. He was educated and taught at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana, and in the United Kingdom. He created works that improvise form and colour and speak to uniquely Ghanaian architecture and African strip-woven textiles, including those of the Kente, the Ewe and Asante of Ghana.
Samuel Nii Odai is a Ghanaian professor of Hydraulics and Water Resources, and a serving Vice Chancellor of Accra Technical University. He is a Commonwealth Academic Fellow, and a recipient of the National Best Research Scientist Gold Award for water, environment and sanitation.
Peter Twumasi is a Ghanaian biochemist, author, and professor at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. He was the director general of the National Sports Authority of Ghana from December 2018. until February 2024 when he left the position days following the tragic, suspicious and untimely death of his son, Jim Ofori Twumasi, a final year Economics student at KNUST.
Richard Tuyee Awuah is a Ghanaian academic, and Plant Pathologist. He was the dean of the faculty of Agriculture of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, and the principal of the University of Education's College of Agriculture.
{{cite web}}
: |last=
has generic name (help)