Season 2 Ep 2
Summary
Ruth Hunter is joined by Suzanne Tate, founder of Studio TO, an award-winning architecture practice with a passion for inclusive design and creating spaces that support human potential.
Together they explore why accessibility should never be an afterthought, how discrimination has been designed into our buildings, and why the industry must move beyond tick-box compliance to focus on equity of experience, how a space feels to move through, arrive in, and belong in.
Suzanne also shares insight from her role judging the Civic Trust Awards (including the Selwyn Goldsmith Award for Universal Design), including standout examples of inclusive architecture and a real-world case where “public” design still pushed wheelchair users to a lesser side entrance.
Chapters
00:00 — Welcome + introduction to Suzanne Tate and Studio TO
01:12 — How Ruth and Suzanne met and why this conversation has been a long time coming
03:03 — Suzanne’s approach: architecture through psychology, wellbeing and human potential
05:20 — Why design education misses accessibility and how Suzanne learned through lived exposure
07:50 — Experiencing the built world differently: wheelchairs, blindness, autism and sensory needs
11:04 — Why awareness still isn’t widespread (architects, developers and homeowners)
12:01 — Designing for life: the questions private clients should be asked during renovations
12:59 — Beyond compliance: why “code-based” design doesn’t create inclusive experiences
16:29 — Civic Trust judging: what they assess beyond aesthetics and architecture trends
18:52 — A standout project: Southeast Dance in Brighton and why it’s a benchmark
21:18 — Why a brilliant project still might not win (and how high the bar is)
22:05 — The “how did this happen?” moment: a new public entrance with steps
24:39 — Side entrances and inequality: why equity of experience matters
25:33 — A major shift: designing for emotional experience, not just widths and regs
27:08 — Designing for children and what it teaches us about scale and perception
28:13 — Proving the model: Ruth and Suzanne’s first joint project and what it aims to show
29:52 — The language problem: why “accessible design” creates resistance and assumptions
31:20 — Reframing as humanity, wellbeing and intuitive support (not “ugly” adaptations)
33:11 — Invisible Creations and the power of normalising supportive features
35:55 — The commercial question: value, rent and demand (and why we need proof)
36:58 — Fundamentals developers can implement now without blowing budgets
39:03 — Suzanne’s magic wand: mindset shift before anything else changes
39:55 — Suzanne’s message: challenge yourself, every small change compounds
40:57 — Where to find Studio TO + how to connect with Suzanne
Keywords
Universal design, inclusive design, accessible housing, equity of experience, discrimination by design, Civic Trust Awards, Selwyn Goldsmith Award, Studio TO, architecture, interior architecture, sensory design, autism-friendly spaces, wellbeing in buildings, mobility, wheelchair access, level thresholds, wider doorways, corridor widths, prams and strollers, ageing population, design legacy, inclusive workplaces, Brighton Southeast Dance, side entrance accessibility, Invisible Creations, grab rails, supportive design features
Contact details
Suzanne Tate / Studio TO Instagram: studio_to_london LinkedIn: Suzanne Tate Website: www.studio-to.co.uk
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