
New Books Network Iain Jackson et. al., "Architecture, Empire, and Trade: The United Africa Company" (Bloomsbury, 2025)
Jan 28, 2026
Rix Wutstra, architectural researcher studying corporate archives and extraction economies. Ewan Harrison, architectural historian focused on West African built environments. They trace the United Africa Company’s everyday 'grey architecture', archival methods and sampling, coastal trading posts and port infrastructure, timber and commodity flows, advertising architecture, and the company’s role in shaping urban modernity.
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Trade Shapes The Built Environment
- The United Africa Company (UAC) shaped West African built environments as a byproduct of trade rather than as intentional architectural projects.
- The UAC's infrastructure—warehouses, offices, trading posts—functioned as the backbone of colonial extraction and urban development.
Importance Of 'Grey' Architecture
- Many UAC buildings were not designed by famous architects and exist as 'grey architecture'—functional, prosaic, and overlooked.
- These mundane structures are crucial for understanding colonial urban networks and imperial power in practice.
Sample Smartly In Business Archives
- Use archival 'informed speculation' and selective sampling when corporate archives lack clear architectural records.
- Collaborate with archivists and a team to navigate complex business archives and uncover architectural narratives.

