Stephen Drew’s BBC Radio London conversation with Rhael ‘LionHeart’ Cape was a useful public moment for Architecture Social. It took the platform outside the usual architecture recruitment lane and explained the community idea in plain language.
The value now is not just nostalgia. The interview shows how Architecture Social was being built in public: part community, part careers platform, part media channel and part recruitment business.
Watch: Stephen Drew on BBC Radio London with LionHeart
This feature is worth watching because it captures Architecture Social being explained outside the usual industry bubble, with community, careers and public conversation at the centre.
Listen: Architecture Social on BBC Radio London
Prefer audio? The full radio segment keeps the LionHeart conversation intact, including why Architecture Social was built and how the community was growing.
You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.
Why the BBC Radio London appearance mattered
Architecture Social was still young as a public brand. A radio conversation gave Stephen a chance to explain why the platform existed, why people in architecture needed a place to connect, and why community had become especially important after a difficult period for the industry.
It also showed a different side of architecture recruitment. Not just vacancies and fees, but people, confidence, access, conversation and the question of how the profession supports itself.
Go deeper with Architecture Social
These related Architecture Social episodes add more context once you have the practical framework.
Listen next: Stephen Drew on finding jobs in architecture
This related guest appearance gives candidates a more practical follow-on route, with Stephen discussing job search, architecture careers and how to position yourself.
You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.
Why the appearance still helps
- It explains Architecture Social in a human way.
- It shows Stephen as founder, recruiter and industry voice.
- It connects community-building to careers and opportunity.
- It gives candidates and practices a feel for the brand before they speak to us.
- It sits neatly with the wider podcast and video archive.
What candidates can take from it
For candidates, the lesson is that careers are not built only through applications. Visibility, confidence, conversation and community all matter. You still need a strong CV and portfolio, but you also need to understand where the industry is talking.
- Use the Architecture Social resources for practical CV, portfolio and interview help.
- Browse current architecture jobs for live opportunities.
- Listen to more Architecture Social podcast episodes for wider career context.
How this fits the Architecture Social story
The BBC feature is one proof point in a wider trust layer: content, community, advice and recruitment all working together.
- Listen to the radio segment for the origin story.
- Use current resources for practical action.
- Browse jobs when you are actively looking.
- Use employer support if your practice needs sharper hiring visibility.
Common mistakes
- Treating press coverage as vanity instead of trust-building evidence.
- Separating community content from recruitment outcomes.
- Forgetting that candidates and clients both judge the brand before they enquire.
- Letting older press posts sit as thin announcements without a useful reader route.
Architecture Social view
Stephen’s recruiter view is that people work with brands they understand. Media, podcasts and community content help Architecture Social feel familiar before the commercial conversation starts.
Next step
Listen to the BBC Radio London segment, then browse the Architecture Social podcast, resources or current jobs.



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