What might a stack of binders, carefully filed with clippings of architects, artists and engineers, reveal about architectural practice in Malaya during the 1950s? For the architect Raymond Honey, these binders were a slow, deliberate way of assembling records stretched across centuries and disciplines, on topics and ideas he was passionate about as an architect. Ultimately, these binders represent more than just personal memorabilia; they exemplify the slow, analogue process of accumulating architectural knowledge – an alternative to today’s rapid, algorithmic methods of learning….Continue Reading Raymond Honey’s Curated Binders: An Analogue Approach to Knowledge Acquisition as a Malayan Architect in the 1950s