Monthly Archives: May 2013

Royal Archaeological Institute

The Royal Archaeological Institute has research funds available each year as follows:

  • RAI Research Fund Awards up to £5,000 are available each year.
  • The Tony Clark Memorial Fund Up to £500 is available each year for scientific elements of archaeological projects.
  • The Bunnell Lewis Research Fund Up to £750 is available each year for projects which preferably involve the excavation and exploration of Roman sites.

RAI Dissertation Prizes

The RAI awards a dissertation prize each year for either an undergraduate (Tony Baggs Award) or master’s dissertation, on a rotating basis. The award goes to the best dissertation on a subject concerning the archaeology or architectural history of Britain, Ireland and adjacent areas of Europe.

Cheney Bursaries

As a result of a bequest left by Frank Cheney, the Institute has a fund to enable students to attend RAI meetings and conferences.
Further details: LINK

1851 Royal Commission

The Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 offers major awards to scientists and engineers for research, development and design. Its aims are to support education for the benefit of productive industry
Further details: LINK

RIBA Awards

The RIBA Awards have been running continuously since 1966 and are judged and presented locally. No matter the shape, size, budget or location, RIBA Award winning schemes set the standard for great architecture all across the country.
Further details: LINK

Rosemary Cramp Fund

The Fund was set up on the retirement of Professor Rosemary Cramp from the Chair of Archaeology at Durham University, to honour her many achievements and contributions to archaeology and heritage. The fund makes grants to individuals and organisations that put forward projects which fall within its scope; and where there is a strong emphasis on innovation.
Further details: LINK

RTPI

George Peplar International Award
This biennial Award is awarded to young people under the age of 30 who wish to undertake a short period of study (say 3 – 4 weeks) on a particular aspect of spatial planning.

RTPI- Young Planner of the Year
The judges will seek to identify younger planners who can be promoted as role models. They must have been born on or after 1 January 1975, have achieved a great deal in their career when compared with their contemporaries, and promise even more for the future. Candidates at the date of entry and of presentation must be members of the Institute (either a Student, Licentiate, Technical, Associate, Chartered, Fellow or a Legal Associate)

Further details: LINK

The Society of Architectural Historian of Great Britain

The Society makes a number of awards, both in recognition of outstanding scholarship and in support of new research and publication.
Alice Davis Hitchcock Medallion

This is the SAHGB’s annual prize for books on architectural history.

Essay Medal

The essay medal is an annual prize for student work.

Publication/Research Bursaries

The SAHGB offers a number of awards for scholars towards publication and research costs. Details about how to apply are available here.

Postgraduate Scholarships
Thanks to several legacies to the SAHGB, a number of scholarships are regularly available for postgraduate students on research degrees in architectural history.

Conference and Symposium Bursaries

Students may apply for assistance towards the cost of their attendance at both the SAHGB annual conference in September, and the annual symposium in May.

LINK

Vernacular Architecture Group

Memorial Essay Prize
In memory of the giants who founded or belonged to the Vernacular Architecture Group in its early days, and prompted by the death of Pauline Fenley, former editor of Vernacular Architecture and a keen promoter of good writing, the Group has established a memorial essay prize. Through this it is hoped to encourage articles from those who have not previously published in national or international journals.
LINK

Conference Bursaries
The Group’s conferences are where members meet to study buildings and discuss their findings. Bursaries are offered each year to enable a registered student or a professional in the early years of his or her career to attend the spring conference. Details on how to apply for a bursary for the next spring conference will be published here in due course.
LINK

ACE Awards

Now Closed for 2011

The ACE Awards are designed to celebrate the successes and diversity of architectural and artistic projects in religious buildings throughout Britain. ACE gives three biennial Awards of £3,000 each.
LINK

UCL Sustainable Heritage scholarship

Now Closed for 2011

The scholarship deadline for the Sustainable Heritage MSc at UCL is 26 May. The scholarships, supported by Ecclesiastical Insurance, are for the academic year 2010/11 and are for £15,000. The one year MSc in Sustainable Heritage is an innovative, inter-disciplinary course for building surveyors, conservators, curators, anthropologists and architects, to become the next generation of leaders in heritage. The course begins on 27 September.
For more information visit LINK

The International Symposium and Workshop

Now Closed for 2011

The International Symposium and Workshop on Cultural Property Risk Analysis is devoted to an increasingly important aspect of cultural heritage: risk assessment and loss mitigation. They are being held association with the ICOM-CC Preventive Conservation Working Group and sponsored by the Society for Risk Analysis. They will be at the Universidade Nova de Lisboa in Lisbon immediately prior to the 16th Triennial meeting of ICOM-CC to reduce travel costs for anyone wishing to participate in both.

The website for the Symposium and Workshop can be found at: http://www.protectheritage.com/Lisbon2011

Awards For Presentation Of Heritage Research

Archaeologists, buildings historians and others concerned with understanding and preserving our heritage spend much of their time and energy on research, which is published in a flood of monographs and articles in specialist journals.  Much of this fascinating work remains unknown to the wider public, whose understanding and support are crucial to the preservation of our heritage.

The purpose of the awards is to encourage researchers to present their research on British and Irish archaeology, historic buildings, and heritage conservation, to the wider public. Short-listed entrants present their research to a public audience as part of a day of presentations; they are judged by the audience and by a panel of judges.

Sponsored by the Royal Archaeological Institute, English Heritage, Cadw, Historic Scotland, the Environment and Heritage Service (an agency within DOE(NI), and the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government (Republic of Ireland).

Further details: LINK

The IHBC Gus Astley Annual Student Award

Up to £500 and free IHBC annual School places for selected entries for outstanding under- or post-graduate coursework relating to built or historc environment conservation.

Topics may cover any aspect of conservation including:

  • evaluation (eg history, research or surveying)
  • management (eg policy, finance or planning)
  • and/or intervention (eg design, technology or architecture)

Applicants need only submit a digital version of their coursework!
See gasa.ihbc.org.uk for forms & details

Closing date: 31st August

For results see the IHBC NewsBlog, Context, the IHBC’s membership journal, & the IHBC Annual School 

For information only please contact:
studentaward@ihbc.org.uk