Nash Partnership, the West of England built environment design, planning and regeneration consultancy, has recruited three experienced members to its team.
Ciaran Andrews, Paul Miller and Richard Mather-Jones have joined the practice’s Bath and Bristol studios, bringing with them a wealth of experience of working with public and private sector clients.
Ciaran joins the practice’s architecture team from London-based MRA Architecture & Interior Design while Richard arrives from Stride Treglown’s Bath office. Paul, who is now working with the practice’s urban design team, was previously with the London studio of international placemaking practice JTP.
Nash Partnership senior partner Edward Nash said: “Ciaran, Paul and will each play an important role on a range of projects for our public sector and private clients.
“Through these appointments, and others to come, we are continuing to add to the breadth and depth of our design capability, urban renewal experience, conservation expertise and construction delivery.
“They complement our carefully tailored skillset of architects, planners and regeneration experts for clients involved in managing change for the built environment.”
He said regional devolution, such as the £1bn deal for the West of England, was bringing a new focus on the value of strategic spatial planning.
“The prospect of leaving the EU will endorse expectations of spreading economic, social and cultural growth more evenly across the country; creating the understanding and the intelligence this will happen is the task we are all involved in,” he said.
Nash Partnership is working on a number of high-profile projects in Bath and Bristol, including a large mixed-use development and a scheme to create 58 new homes.
It is also handling country house projects, factory developments and other urban renewal projects in Bristol, Bath, Cheltenham and Herefordshire as well as projects further afield in Chelsea, Berkshire, and on the north and south coasts of Wales.
Pictured, from left: Richard Mather-Jones, Paul Miller, Ciaran Andrews