The RIBA question is not just who becomes president. It is whether the institute can still feel useful to students, employees and practice founders who are dealing with real costs, real salaries and real business pressure.
Stephen Drew backed Chris Williamson because the profession needs practical representation, not another round of polite statements. If the RIBA wants people to care, it has to show how it helps the people doing the work.
Source links and context
These links give the background to Stephen’s position and the wider RIBA discussion.
Why this matters beyond one election
Architecture has changed faster than many institutions around it. Tuition fees, long qualification routes, salary pressure, procurement, practice costs and client expectations all shape whether people can build sustainable careers.
That is why representation needs to feel specific. Students need a route that does not punish them before they begin. Employees need a profession that understands salaries, progression and workplace reality. Practice founders need support with fees, hiring, risk and commercial confidence.
The three groups the RIBA must not ignore
- Students, who are facing high costs before they have any earning power.
- Architecture employees, who need better salary conversations, clearer progression and less mystique around the profession.
- Small and emerging practice founders, who need practical help with fees, business development, hiring and client expectations.
Salaries and fees sit in the same conversation
Architecture salary frustration usually links back to fees. If practices cannot charge properly, the pressure lands on teams, salaries, training and retention. That is not a candidate-only problem or an employer-only problem. It is a profession problem.
Architecture Social sees this daily through recruitment: candidates want fair pay and a clear future; practices want strong people but often feel squeezed by fees and project risk. A useful professional body should help both sides have a more honest conversation.
What useful representation should prove
A stronger RIBA conversation should connect principle to everyday working life.
- How does this help students enter the profession without being crushed by cost?
- How does this help employees progress, earn fairly and stay in architecture?
- How does this help practices charge, hire and operate more sustainably?
Architecture Social view
Stephen’s view is that the profession needs to be more honest about the gap between aspiration and reality. Architecture can still be brilliant, but it cannot keep asking people to absorb every cost, every delay and every sacrifice quietly.
Next step
Read the source links, then ask what you need the profession’s institutions to do better. The answer will be different for a student, an employee and a practice owner, but the need for practical support is shared.
For related career support, compare the architecture salary guide and browse current architecture jobs on Architecture Social.



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