bahrainthismonth.com | JUNE 2026 INTERVIEW 29 engaging. Bahrain is well connected and probusiness.” With much of nicholas’ current work taking place internationally, particularly in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain remains central to the firm’s regional identity. “We are currently harnessing Bahrain’s business energy to export design services and are developing Bahrain as a design centre of excellence for the region, from which we are exporting the best of Britain and the best of Bahrain to the world.” Learning From Tradition For nicholas, contemporary design does not mean ignoring the past. Instead, Mr. Bonaventure believes that architecture should draw strength from local culture, climate and memory. This philosophy is particularly important in a world where global cities often risk becoming visually interchangeable. For nicholas, Bahrain’s buildings and public spaces should immediately communicate a sense of place. He argues: “In today’s ultra-connected world, where a lot of places and experiences feel the same (there is a sense, we could say, of ‘creeping global sameness’), it’s important that people and buildings feel as if they belong. People getting off a flight into Bahrain should instantly feel they are in Bahrain. That is the essence of our work currently.” The firm designs from what he calls ‘first principles’, engaging directly with climate, culture and society rather than imposing imported solutions. By borrowing intelligently from the past, he believes architects can create places that carry meaning into the future. The Future City Looking ahead, the area that most excites Mr. Bonaventure is urbanism. He sees huge potential in precinct design and the reimagining of city quarters as complete destinations, particularly in Bahrain and the wider Gulf. The future, he suggests, lies in mixed-use neighbourhoods where daily life is not built around the car. Retail, homes, offices, entertainment, education and healthcare should be connected within compact, walkable environments. He explains: “Walkable, integrated developments are going to become huge in the Gulf over the coming years, and economic success (the entire success of cities, in fact) is going to be directly linked to our level of skill in combining multiple uses into large sites in a manner that eliminates car dependency and galvanises communities around active streets and spontaneous social interaction.” His benchmark is clear: essential parts of life should be within a seven-minute walk. For Gulf cities that achieve this, he believes the longterm rewards will be considerable. In 2026, nicholas will continue its work in Riyadh and Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province, while also seeking further opportunities in Jeddah. The firm is enjoying its retail and interiors work, continuing to promote its concept of the ‘modern souq’, first developed in Bahrain. The company’s design thinking also carries a British influence. He points to the Regency architecture of George III and George IV as a period of calm, order and purpose, but his approach is equally shaped by traditional Islamic architecture and urban form. Mr. Bonaventure says: “Planning and placemaking must always be drawn from the climate and culture of its locale – from locus – and so I would say that both strains – the Bahraini and the British – have come to influence the way I work.” Ultimately, his definition of good design is practical, human and rooted in experience. Architecture must serve people, improve places and create environments where communities want to spend time. He concludes: “Architecture and urbanism are both about people, and for a project to succeed it must be people-focused, and people must love spending time there. We pride ourselves on creating exceptional projects for exceptional people, and if you believe we have done that – by designing regeneratively, by ‘making things better’ – then we have succeeded.”
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