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In the winter of 2004, a group of Chinese cockle pickers lost their lives in the cold waters of Morecambe Bay after being caught unaware by fast-rising tides and the bay’s treacherous geographic conditions. Set in Blackpool, North West England, The Lost Boys: It's OK to Cry explores an engineered architecture comprising a memorial to the Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, an RNLI lifeboat station, and a survival training pool. Together, these elements aim to educate coastal communities about marine dangers and raise public awareness of coastal risks.
The design responds to Lancashire’s geotrauma—shifting sands and rapid tidal change through three interrelated programmes. The memorial offers a space for Blackpool’s residents and visitors to engage in a Chinese ritual ceremony 20 years on, acting as a symbolic tombstone. The RNLI facilities investigate architectural strategies for coastal resilience. A time-based, episodic design methodology fosters emotionally resonant experiences and repositions Blackpool’s lost generation as lifesavers.
On 5 February 2025, Captain Paul, a seasoned RNLI rescuer from Blackpool, returns to the annual ceremony commemorating the 2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster — a tragedy he once braved. But this year, something stirs beneath the surface.
During a summer storm, the lifeboat station glows under emergency lighting as RNLI crew respond to an emergency call.
The RNLI lifeboat station and training pool are cantilevered from the memorial, which stands permanently on Blackpool’s beach as a reflection of local geotrauma and the lessons learned from the tragedy and envision a safer marine environment.
Interior views capture the spatial qualities of each world: the clean stillness of the training pool, the sacred quiet of the memorial, and the glowing urgency of the lifeboat station bracing for the sea’s next call.
Analytical drawings reveal the project's layered logic, from the tidal movement of the survival training pool, to the sculpted light of the memorial, and the lifeboat station’s responsive façade shaped by the RNLI crew’s daily activities.