Robin Fees, CEO of the Architectural Association Association, announced he will retire from his role at the end of this year.
Fees replaces Adrian Coles, who left the position in December 2013, and spent 12 years as the CEO of the Trade Organization.
In a LinkedIn post, Fieth said the role was “the best job I've ever had.”
“It's hard to achieve so many things in the last 12 years, but I feel like it's a good time to pass the baton, so I'm planning on leaving the Architectural Association later this year,” Fieth said. I am writing.
BSA was founded in 1775 at the start of the Industrial Revolution, celebrating its existence this year.
“In a world that appears to be dominated by shareholder-owned companies that aim to use their customers for the benefit of short-term external shareholders, we are committed to benefiting our client members, their communities, and our society. We are working with a sector that has been around for 250 years to bring. The short-term is very refreshing,” Fees says in his post.
“The architectural society has increased its share of the mortgage market from 18% to 24%. It helps 1.1 million people buy their first homes and is a major lender for everyone who wants to build their own homes. (collectively, the fifth largest home builder in the UK).
“Our share of High Street Branch has grown from 14% to over 30%. And now, two building societies have acquired retail banks and reestablished mutual banks in the UK for the first time since 2013.”
The BSA is currently in the process of appointing a successor to Fieth.