Abigail Rebecca Lamb

Interior Architect

Interior Architect

Blending sustainability, storytelling, and smart design into every space.

I’m Abigail Rebecca Lamb, an interior architect from Cumbria with a passion for creating thoughtful, human‑centred spaces that balance creativity, sustainability, and technical precision. I recently completed my BSc (Hons) in Interior Architecture at the University of Salford, where I developed strong skills in design development, technical drawing, and visual storytelling. I’m especially drawn to adaptive reuse and sustainable material strategies, and I love exploring how design can enhance wellbeing through natural light, greenery, and biophilic principles. My work is shaped by a commitment to environmentally responsible design, supported by certifications in Net‑Zero Architecture, biodiversity in the built environment, wellness‑focused design, and sustainable materials. I’m also fascinated by how emerging technologies like AI and AR can elevate both the design process and user experience. I’ve strengthened my communication, teamwork, and problem‑solving skills through roles in design, retail, and hospitality, and I’ve grown my technical abilities through competitions such as the John P. Eberhard Student Design Competition and Archiol’s Smart Village Hub. Whether I’m drafting in AutoCAD, modelling in SketchUp, or crafting physical prototypes, I approach every project with curiosity, precision, and a genuine desire to create spaces that feel intuitive, uplifting, and meaningful.

Cumbria

صورة Abigail Rebecca Lamb الشخصية

Architectural Projects

Biophilic, sustainable architectural design with a strong technical foundation

Bright Beginnings: Neuron Nock Village

Bright Beginnings: Neuron Nock Village

Bright Beginnings: Neuron Nock Village is a neuroscience‑informed early childhood centre designed to support cognitive, emotional, and social development through architecture. Grounded in Piaget’s developmental theory and contemporary research on neuroplasticity, the project creates sensory‑rich, biophilic environments that encourage exploration, problem‑solving, and “serve‑and‑return” interaction. Each space is tailored to children’s behavioural temperaments, using light, colour, and materiality to promote engagement, tranquillity, or positivity. The scheme blends evidence‑based design with playful spatial storytelling, forming a holistic environment that nurtures the developing brain.

This project was developed for the John P. Eberhard Student Design Competition (Spring 2025), an international competition hosted by the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture (ANFA). The competition challenges students to design environments that directly respond to neuroscience principles, demonstrating how architecture can positively influence human behaviour, cognition, and wellbeing. Your submission focuses on early childhood development, referencing research that highlights the importance of sensory engagement, symbolic play, and social interaction in the first seven years of life. The project draws on: Piaget’s Sensorimotor and Preoperational Stages, noting that by the end of stage two, “a child’s brain reaches 90% of its development” . Karen Dobkins’ behavioural studies, which link children’s temperaments to environmental needs, informing the design of temperament‑responsive bedrooms and learning spaces. The neuroscience concept of “serve and return”, described in your document as “responsive exchanges between children and caregivers… crucial for developing neural connections that support language and social skills” . This research foundation positions the project as both academically rigorous and deeply human‑centred.

JOY — Women’s Chronic Condition Management Centre

JOY — Women’s Chronic Condition Management Centre

A therapeutic, community‑anchored centre in Manchester reimagining chronic gynecologic and hormonal healthcare through emotionally attuned, biophilic, and dignity‑centred spatial design.

JOY is an interior architecture project that reframes how chronic gynecologic and hormonal conditions are supported within the built environment. The document describes it as “a dedicated centre in the heart of Manchester that specialises in management, early intervention, and holistic support for conditions such as endometriosis, PCOS, PMDD, menopause‑related disorders, pelvic pain syndromes, and complex cases.” The design positions emotional wellbeing as a core architectural driver — recognising that these conditions involve “cycles of vulnerability, frustration, and resilience.” The spatial strategy prioritises comfort, privacy, psychological safety, and a sense of agency. Natural light, biophilic elements, and warm materials counteract the sterility of traditional clinical settings, while flexible layouts allow care pathways to evolve over time. JOY bridges clinical competence with community connection, becoming what the document calls “a civic anchor… one that elevates women’s health, fosters connection, and redefines what chronic‑care environments can be.”

المهارات

AutoCadSketchUpAdobe PhotoshopIndesign

Education

B.Sc. (Hons) Interior Architecture

University Of Salford

سبتمبر 2023 - مايو 2026Salford, Greater Manchester
درجة

التركيز: Interior Architecture

المقررات

Data StructuresOperating SystemsDatabases

التواصل

Open to work
Cumbria
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البريد الإلكتروني

abigailrlamb2004@gmail.com

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راسلني

Abigail Rebecca Lamb

Interior Architect

© 2026 Abigail Rebecca Lamb. جميع الحقوق محفوظة.