New Associate designers join Tibbalds team
Over the past year we have strengthened our urban design Associate team with two new team members, each bringing really interesting and exciting skills to Tibbalds.
Ketki Mudholkar brings extensive experience working across regeneration, masterplanning, research and strategies. Since joining Tibbalds last year she has been leading our work on a range of projects including: the Stockport Design Code; picking up and completing the Marshmoor Area SPD for adoption; and developing a short research piece for the MHCLG interrogating the challenges and opportunities for delivering medium density housing across areas of marginal viability.
Prior to this role Ketki was an Associate at Hawkins\Brown and an Urban Designer at Publica.
“I enjoy getting to know what makes places special and distinct- not just what makes them different, but what it is that people love and cherish about them. Good design and architecture are a part of this, but enabling a process brings together the right things, in the right places at the right time is what can translate good design into really special places.”
Susanne Lettau joined in the Spring. She brings over eighteen years of architectural and masterplanning experience in the UK and Europe. She specialises in environmental led masterplanning, currently developing a masterplan at East Chelmsford Garden Community; and a vision, concept and framework masterplan for an 8,000-home new settlement, ‘Marlcombe’, in East Devon, that has been selected as one of the potential New Towns.
Prior to joining Tibbalds Susanne has been an Architect and Urban Designer at Zaha Hadid, Arup, Clifton Emery Design and LDA Design.
“I am passionate about delivering forward-thinking, high-quality masterplans that embrace low-carbon lifestyles, integrate sustainable transport, and apply circular design principles.
I focus on creating distinctive places that are socially and environmentally sustainable, and I find it rewarding to work through the technical details to ensure designs are contextual and deliverable.”
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