Till worked for relatively low-key architectural practices, Alex Gordon Partnership and Peter Currie Architects, before joining his partner,
Sarah Wigglesworth, to design and build their well-known house and office, 9 Stock Orchard Street, which was featured on the first series of the TV Programme
Grand Designs; subsequently the presenter Kevin McCloud named the project as one of his favourite projects. The building, made from straw bales and other unconventional materials, was awarded
Civic Trust Award (2002),
RIBA National Award (2004) and RIBA Sustainability Prize (2004). It has been published extensively worldwide, with the journal World Architecture saying: "It is destined to become an icon, the subject of dissertations and copycat projects. Unlike the established canon of exemplary houses, this house/office is a deep, dense and determined essay on the question: what is architecture today?" He left Sarah Wigglesworth Architects in 2002 to concentrate on an academic career. Till curated the British Pavilion at the 2006 Venice Architecture Biennale. The exhibition, entitled
Echo City received very mixed reviews, with severe criticism from the London architectural press, but praise from international reviewers. He chaired the RIBA Awards Panel from 2004 to 2006, the only academic to have held this position. In 2013 he co-curated the UK Pavilion at the Shenzhen Biennale with a team from Central Saint Martins, for which they were awarded the Biennale's Academic Committee Prize. == Academic career ==