Category: Awards
2017 ACT Architecture Award Winners
And The Winners Are:
From the small-scale residential renovation through to the large-scale public building, projects of all sizes that enrich our environments have been honoured at the Australian Institute of Architects’ 2017 ACT Architecture Awards in Canberra on Saturday night.
The ACT’s highest architecture honour, the Canberra Medallion, went to Constitution Avenue by NCA, JILA, Hill Thalis, SMEC and AECOM. Over a decade in the making, Constitution Avenue, which also received the Sir John Overall Award for Urban Design, has realised Griffin’s vision with a project that ‘negotiates the macro and micro scale with consistency, clarity and vision’.
‘Its character is responsive to its particular location and adjacency, with subtle changes in scale and detail – from civic to boulevard, bushland to ceremonial, yet it successfully conveys integrated design aspirations. The NCA in its wisdom gathered a team of collaborators to achieve an outcome of immense public worth, and in doing so, have given us an exemplar to plan, design and deliver public domain works,’ the jury noted.
Fender Katsalidis Architects have added to their long list of awards for their NewActon Nishi development receiving the Sydney Ancher Award for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing and an Award for Commercial Architecture.
‘In an era where housing needs to be denser, more compact, of high quality, and closer to civic centres, Nishi NewActon provides a compelling exemplar,’ the jury stated.
‘A remarkable example of how seemingly impossible constraints can be deftly handled in the hands of a skilled architect,’ saw MD House by Ben Walker Architects take home the Gene Willsford Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions).
In awarding the rennovation, the jury noted ‘the result clearly speaks of the fruitful engagement between architect and clients in delivering a well-considered outcome sensitive to their needs and aspirations.’
ACT Chapter President, Rob Henry, praised the entrants and winners for their clear commitment to designing places for people.
‘Continued population growth in our small territory, with its limited boundaries, must be managed
with a commitment to urban renewal and densification. It is the ‘voids’ that will provide the ACT with
sustainable opportunities for future growth. Underpinning any successful densification will be the inclusion of places for people that enrich sociocultural environments.
‘Regardless of the scale of project, our work should be developed on a premise that architecture is simply the backdrop for living, and we should also acknowledge that to achieve exemplary outcomes we must continue to engage with people in the process of making,’ Henry said.
A total of 25 Named Awards, Awards and Commendations were presented on the night from a field of 45 entries. Named Award and Award winners will now progress to the National Architecture Awards to be announced in Canberra on Thursday 2 November.
Full list of winners:
Commercial Architecture
Award – NewActon Nishi by Fender Katsalidis Architects
Award – Casey Market Town by Cox Architecture
Commendation – Sikorsky Helitech MH-60R Through Life Support Facility by Daryl Jackson Alastair Swayn Pty Ltd
Heritage
The J S Murdoch Award – Embassy of Sweden by Guida Moseley Brown Architects
Award – Howitt Street Residence by Cox Architecture
Interior Architecture
The W Hayward Morris Award – Willinga Park by Cox Architecture and Sally Hieatt Interiors
Award – Canberra Airport – International by Guida Moseley Brown Architects Commendation – Casino Canberra Refurbishment by Cox Architecture
Public Architecture
The Romaldo Giurgola Award – Willinga Park by Cox Architecture
Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations & Additions)
The Gene Willsford Award – MD House by Ben Walker Architects
Commendation – Three Generation House by Light House Architecture and Science
Residential Architecture – Houses (New)
The Malcolm Moir and Heather Sutherland Award – McCarthy Purba House by Anthony Knobel Architect
Award – SG House by Ben Walker Architects
Commendation – O’Connor House by de Rome Architects
Commendation – Windywoppa by Collins Caddaye Architects
Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing
The Sydney Ancher Award – NewActon Nishi by Fender Katsalidis Architects
Award – Atelier by Bates Smart
Award – Barcelona by Guida Moseley Brown Architects
Small Project Architecture
The ACT Award – Corner House by Joanna Nelson Architect
Award – Pop Inn by Daryl Jackson Alastair Swayn Pty Ltd
Sustainable Architecture
The Derek Wrigley Award – Corner House by Joanna Nelson Architect
Urban Design
The Sir John Overall Award – Constitution Avenue by NCA, JILA, Hill Thalis, SMEC and AECOM
Award – Woden Stair by Cox Architecture
Enduring Architecture
Award – Lakeview by Harry Seidler & Associates 1984
COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture
Award – John James Village by Daryl Jackson Alastair Swayn Pty Ltd
Chapter Awards and Prizes
Canberra Medallion – Constitution Avenue by NCA, JILA, Hill Thalis, SMEC and AECOM
The Pamille Berg Award for Art in Architecture – Woden Stair by Cox Architecture
The Robert Foster Award for Light in Architecture – Canberra Airport – International by Guida Moseley Brown Architects
Architectural Professional of the Year – Shoba Cole, May + Russell Architects President’s Medal – ACT Emerging Architects and Graduates
Clem Cummings Medal – Tim Reeves and Alan Roberts
Emerging Architect Prize – Jessica de Rome, de Rome Architects
ACT Chapter Emerging Architect Prize – Special Commendation – Annette Pogas, ArPM
ACT Chapter Student Medallion – Daniel Reardon, University of Canberra
Daryl Jackson Alastair Swayn Graduate Prize – Eleanor Kirkham, University of Canberra
John Redmond Prize – Chloe Yin, University of Canberra
2017 Architecture Awards Season
Congratulations to all award winning projects announced at recent ceremonies across the country. Check out the full list of winners for each Chapter here.
From a field of 967 entries around the country and overseas, over 150 jurors bestowed 334 Named Awards, Awards and Commendations across the 12 main Awards categories, in addition to a range of Chapter specific awards and prizes.
Immediate Past President Ken Maher now leads a distinguished jury of Lawrence Nield, Sue Dugdale, Peter Maddison and Melissa Bright, given the difficult task of judging all 206 entries eligible for the 2017 National Architecture Awards. We look forward to releasing the shortlist in the coming months and celebrating at the presentation night in Canberra on November 2. Learn more about this year’s esteemed National jury below.
2017 NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE AWARDS JURY
Jury Chair
Ken Maher
LFRAIA
Immediate Past President
Ken Maher is a leading Australian architect, active in practice and academia. He advises governments on design, sustainability and the future of cities throughout Australia and internationally. Ken has a strong interest in the role of design contributing to public life. He writes, lectures and speaks regularly on the value of design, cities, sustainability and public responsibility in architecture. Ken is a Fellow of HASSELL, following 20 years as a Principal and nine years as Chairman.
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In 2015 Ken was elected President of the Australian Sustainable Built Environment Council. He is Chair of the City of Sydney’s Design Advisory Panel, a member of the Sydney Opera House Eminent Architects Panel and a board member of Urban Growth NSW and the Cooperative Research Centre for Low Carbon Living. Ken’s recognition as a designer is reflected in the numerous awards received for projects he has led. In 2009, Ken was awarded the Australian Institute of Architect’s highest accolade, the Gold Medal and in 2010 he received the Australian Award in Landscape Architecture from the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects.
Jury
Lawrence Nield
LFRAIA, RIBA
Lawrence Nield was the 2012 Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medallist, the Institute of Architects highest accolade, and in 2007 he was honoured by Republic of France with le Chevalier de l’ordre des l’Arts et Lettres. He is a Professor of Architecture at the University of Newcastle and the Northern Territory Government Architect. Lawrence was founding principal of Bligh Voller Nield where he was responsible for many award-winning buildings including…
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the University of the Sunshine Coast Library (Sir Zelman Cowan), the Mt Druitt Hospital, the David Maddison School of Medicine, the Overseas Passenger Terminal in Sydney, St Vincent’s Hospital, the Olympic Tennis Centre, and Questacon in Canberra. He headed up the master planning team for the Sydney Olympic Games and designed major sporting venues in the Sydney, Athens, and London Olympic Games. In Beijing, he designed Olympic Tennis complex and the Rowing Centre. In 2009 Architectural Society of China, gave the Tennis complex the Grand Architectural Creation Award. He was the Chair the NSW Heritage Council from 2012 to 2015.
Sue Dugdale
Director, Susan Dugdale and Associates
Sue Dugdale grew up in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Britain. She studied architecture at Queensland University and RMIT and worked in several practices in Melbourne before relocating to Alice Springs in 1994 where she now lives. Six years working with the Aboriginal-owned architectural practice Tangentyere Design gave Sue an appreciation of the unique cultural depth and climatic context of central Australia. Through her own practice, Susan Dugdale and Associates, started in 2000, Sue pursues a personal passion for exploring and giving form to the cultural narrative and environment of the region.
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Sue has produced a body of work whose influence is notable in the fabric of Alice Springs and beyond. The work of her practice has won numerous awards, and was featured in the 2014 Venice Biennale.
Sue was an elected member of the AIA’s National Council from 2015 to 2016, and is a recent long term member of the NT Heritage Advisory Council. She has taught architectural design at various architecture schools including Melbourne University, RMIT, Deakin University and the Tasmania University of Technology.
Peter Maddison
LFRAIA
Director, Maddison Architects Pty Ltd
Host, Grand Designs Australia
Peter Maddison is a multi-award-winning architect and Founding Director of Maddison Architects. He has contributed to the Australian Institute of Architects over many years, and is currently a member of the Honours Committee of the Victorian Chapter. In 2014 he was conferred the degree of Doctor of Design (Honoris Causa) by RMIT. In 2016, he was awarded the National President’s Prize by the Australian Institute of Architects for Australian Achievement in Architecture. Maddison Architects has sought to create a new and relevant architecture and has won a total of 55 commendations and awards in the Architecture design field.
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Peter is Ambassador for the not-for-profit Melbourne Open House program, the Planet Ark endorsed Environmental Edge campaign, Kids Under Cover charity, and Architects Without Frontiers.
Peter took on the role of Host of The LifeStyle Channel’s Australian production of Grand Designs in 2009. In 2011 it won two ASTRA awards, and also received Logie nominations in 2011, 2013 and 2015. Series 7 will go to air in 2017. Peter is also the Editor-at-Large for the Grand Designs Australia Magazine, and his first book, “Grand Designs Australia The Handbook” was released in late 2013.
Melissa Bright
Founding Director, MAKE architecture
Mel Bright is the owner and founding director of MAKE architecture, a Melbourne based emerging practice that has already gathered a collection of diverse and highly acclaimed built work. MAKE is best known for its houses but the practice is currently working on a number of city making projects across a variety of scales and types including civic, educational and multi-residential projects.
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Mel has led the MAKE team since starting the practice in 2006. Her prior work experience has included work in the UK, Europe, South East Asia and China. A broadly based lineage of experience has allowed Mel a long gestation of the ethos that underpins MAKE today. MAKE value innovative design thinking, thoughtful material explorations, respect for heritage, deference to civic context and rigorous acknowledgement of environmental influences. A deep seated passion for design excellence has fuelled these MAKE values to widely awarded built outcomes.
Multi-Residential, regional projects among winners announced at 2017 NSW Architecture Awards
With the need for 190,000 new dwellings in the next four years according to the Greater Sydney Commission, access to quality, affordable housing options could not be more important. It comes as no surprise that residential categories figured strongly in the Australian Institute of Architects’ 2017 NSW Architecture Awards, announced at Luna Park on Saturday 1 July
Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing was the largest category in the 2017 NSW program highlighting the role architects have in developing alternative housing options for our increasing population. From a strong field of 34 entries the jury shortlisted 14 projects and bestowed nine awards and commendations.
NSW Chapter President Andrew Nimmo was encouraged by the quantity and quality of multi-residential entries in this year’s awards.
‘Affordability and diversity of housing is an important community issue and while we need to have bigger cities to accommodate population growth, the challenge is to make better cities with increased open space and amenity and more reliable public transport and infrastructure must balance this greater density.
‘Many of these entries contribute to addressing these issues through inventive design solutions,’ Nimmo said.
In a fitting moment of poignancy, the evening began with the announcement of the Enduring Architecture Award – awarded to buildings of more than 25 years in age, which have stood the test of time – to 17 Wylde St, a 1948 design of Aaron M Bolot, the eponymous architect of the Institute’s highest honour in NSW Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing.
The 2017 honour was presented to Candalepas Associates for their President Avenue project which ‘sets an ambitious agenda, changing the expectations of apartment living in the outer suburbs and suggesting how an increased density can be sustainably and sensitively achieved,’ the jury noted.
Other winners in this category include 41 Birmingham, Alexandria by SJB, noted by the jury as ‘a fine attempt to give a cross-section of the community with different housing needs a distinctive, refined and practical alternative to detached houses’ and 88 Angel St by Steele Associates Architects which consists of three semi-detached homes featuring green roofs that provide thermal and acoustic insulation, as well as encouraging native birds and insects once common in Sydney.
There was also a regional emphasis in this year’s awards, with some of the biggest winners located beyond Sydney, including three regional projects which won top honours in their respective categories.
One of the state’s most distinguished awards, the Sulman Medal for Public Architecture, was awarded to the Orange Regional Museum by Crone Architects for its ‘simple, bold and confident moves’ that have ‘created a destination for locals and visitors,’ as noted by the jury.
The Glasshouse Restaurant by TKD Architects at Tamworth’s historic Goonoo Goonoo Station received the Blacket Prize for Regional Architecture, as well as taking out the competitive Commercial Architecture category with the jury making particular note of the ‘considerable impact [of the project] on the local economy’.
‘The transformation of Goonoo Goonoo Station, and the skilful efforts of the architects over almost a decade and several clients, is a testament to their commitment to the place, and to revitalising the region’s economy through design excellence.’
The other big regional winner was Pirramimma Garden Pavilion by CAB Consulting, located in the Blue Mountains and whose primary structure is made from a single Cyprus tree. It won the Robert Woodward Award for Small Project Architecture.
In total the jury bestowed 66 awards and commendations. Projects that received a Named Award or Award at the NSW Architecture Awards will now progress to the National Architecture Awards to be announced in Canberra on Thursday 2 November.
Full list of winners:
Commercial Architecture
The Sir Arthur G Stephenson Award – Glasshouse at Goonoo Goonoo Station by TKD Architects
Award – Sydney Processing Centre by Genton Architecture
Award – The EY Centre by fjmt
Commendation – 13 Bowden by H&E Architects
Commendation – Tramsheds Harold Park by Mirvac Design
Educational Architecture
The William E Kemp Award – NBCS by WMK
Award – Charles Sturt University Engineering Building by ThomsonAdsett
Award – East Sydney Early Learning Centre by Andrew Burges Architects in association with City of Sydney
Commendation – Dr Chau Chak Wing Building by Gehry Partners (Design Architect) with DJRD (Executive Architect)
Commendation – The University of Sydney Business School by Woods Bagot and KANNFINCH
Heritage
The Greenway Award – Juanita Nielsen Community Centre by Neeson Murcutt Architects Pty. Ltd. in association with City of Sydney
Award – 100 Harris St by SJB
Commendation – 57 Lower Fort Street- Regency Townhouse by Tropman & Tropman Architects (Tasman Storey- Design Principal)
Commendation – EDG Forum by Archer Office
Commendation – Sydney Sewerage Pumping Station No. 1 by Hector Abrahams Architects
Interior Architecture
The John Verge Award – Juanita Nielsen Community Centre by Neeson Murcutt Architects Pty. Ltd. in association with City of Sydney
Award – Indigo Slam by Smart Design Studio
Award – Sydney Processing Centre by Genton Architecture
Commendation – East Sydney Early Learning Centre by Andrew Burges Architects in association with City of Sydney
Commendation – EDG Forum by Archer Office
Commendation – Woollahra Library by BVN
Public Architecture
The Sulman Medal – Orange Regional Museum by Crone Architects
Award – Albury Wodonga Regional Cancer Centre by Billard Leece Partnership Pty Ltd
Award – Juanita Nielsen Community Centre by Neeson Murcutt Architects Pty. Ltd. in association with City of Sydney
Award – Lizard Log Amenities by CHROFI
Commendation – North Bondi Amenities by Sam Crawford Architects with Lymesmith
Commendation – Wynyard Walk by Woods Bagot
Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations & Additions)
The Hugh and Eva Buhrich Award – Annandale House by Welsh + Major Architects
Award – Jac by panovscott
Award – Lindfield House by Tribe Studio Architects
Award – Little Sister’s House by Candalepas Associates
Commendation – House Au Yeung by Tribe Studio Architects
Commendation – North Avoca by savio parsons
Residential Architecture – Houses (New)
The Wilkinson Award – Tamarama House by Durbach Block Jaggers Architects
Award – Brick House by Andrew Burges Architects
Award – Coogee House by Chenchow Little
Award – Foredune House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture
Award – Riverview House by David Boyle Architect
Commendation – Brougham Place by Smart Design Studio
Commendation – Macmasters Beach House by Polly Harbison
Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing
The Aaron Bolot Award – President Avenue by Candalepas Associates
Award – 41 Birmingham by SJB
Award – 88 Angel St by Steele Associates Architects
Award – Anadara by fjmt; Collaborating Architects Lendlease Design
Award – Crown 515 by Smart Design Studio
Award – Solis: Little Bay Apartments by Fox Johnston
Commendation – Cowper Street Housing by Andrew Burns Architect (A—B)
Commendation – EVE by DKO Architecture
Commendation – Skye by Crown Group by Koichi Takada Architects
Small Project Architecture
The Robert Woodward Award – Pirramimma Garden Pavilion by CAB Consulting
Award – Bondi Beach Picnic Shelters by Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
Award – North Bondi Amenities by Sam Crawford Architects with Lymesmith
Commendation – Campos Barangaroo by Woods Bagot
Commendation – Froebel Play Pods by Silvester Fuller
Commendation – Newcastle Music Studio by m3architecture
Commendation – MA House by SHAC
Sustainable Architecture
The Milo Dunphy Award – 88 Angel St by Steele Associates Architects
Award – Central Park Sydney by Tzannes and Cox Richardson and Foster + Partners
Award – Sydney Processing Centre by Genton Architecture
Commendation – Charles Sturt University Engineering Building by ThomsonAdsett
Urban Design
The Lloyd Rees Award – Central Park Sydney by Tzannes and Cox Richardson and Foster + Partners
Award – Kensington Street Precinct by Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
Award – The Goods Line by ASPECT Studios with CHROFI
Commendation – Dutton Plaza by Antoniades Architects
Commendation – Wynyard Walk by Woods Bagot
Enduring Architecture
Award – 17 Wylde Street by Aaron M Bolot (Designed 1948, completed 1951)
COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture
Award – Lizard Log Amenities by CHROFI
Commendation – Coogee House by Chenchow Little
Chapter Prizes
Blacket Prize – Glasshouse at Goonoo Goonoo Station by TKD Architects
City of Sydney Lord Mayor’s Prize Joint Winner –Tramsheds Harold Park by Mirvac Design
City of Sydney Lord Mayor’s Prize Joint Winner – Kensington Street Precinct by Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects
President’s Prize – Jack Mundey
Emerging Architect Prize – Tomek Archer, Archer Office
Marion Mahony Griffin Prize – Jocelyn Jackson, TKD Architects
David Linder Prize – Natalia Krysiak, Hayball Architects
2017 Victorian Architecture Awards Celebrate Places for People
The Victorian Chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects is pleased to congratulate the winners of the 2017 Victorian Architecture Awards, announced tonight (Friday 30 June 2017).
Juries noted that ‘creating places for people’ was evident in all categories, showcasing architects’ ability to contribute to both the development of community and the public realm in a variety of positive and innovative ways. According to Vanessa Bird, Victorian Chapter President, this year there is a focus on designing healthy, liveable spaces. Living and working in well-designed buildings influences the way we think and feel; it inspires and uplifts us, promotes wellbeing and health and can bring us together in new ways. The value of good architecture is about creating places for people.
Of the 223 entries, approximately 35 percent were judged to be worthy of an Award or Commendation. With no single dominant winner taking home multiple awards, entries represented a broad range of practices and scales of work. Winning projects varied from a tiny beach shack and a temporary performance space, through to a multifaceted civic complex and a large research hospital.
Fifty eight Named Awards, Awards, and Commendations were presented across 16 Awards and Prizes categories, representing the best of Victoria’s architecture. Each of the projects provides architecture that significantly contributes to its local community — culturally, economically and socially.
Forty houses were entered in this year’s Residential New category and the jury welcomed the variation of designs presented. Tim Jackson, Residential Architecture Houses – New Jury Chair noted how encouraging it was to see the exploration of ideas across the range of entries that demonstrated how good design can enrich family life. In making our judgements we recognised the positive role that architects play in challenging our preconceptions about what makes a house both liveable and remarkable.
This year’s winner of the John George Knight Heritage award, Albert Park College Environmental Arts Hub by Six Degrees Architecture, exemplifies the value of well-designed buildings as a contributor to stronger communities, and the creation of places for people. This building opens its doors to the local community. The school has positioned itself as a good institutional citizen, and is a shining example of how heritage places can be creatively adapted to take on a new and important role in their communities.
The 2017 Melbourne Prize for the first time went equally to two projects. Both public projects — Tanderrum Bridge by John Wardle Architects and NADAAA in collaboration and 2016 NGV Architectural Commission by M@ STUDIO Architects — make an evocative and memorable contribution to Melbourne’s cultural and urban landscape. One, the bridge, permanently by the banks of the Yarra River in Birrarung Marr, the other, a stylised car wash, for just six months within the Grollo Equiset Garden at NGV in St Kilda Road.
The strong showing of Health projects within the awards is an acknowledgement by both government and the design profession of the importance of quality design environments in ensuring positive health-related outcomes.
Winner of both the Victorian Medal and the William Wardell Award for Public Architecture, the Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre (VCCC), was acknowledged as a handsome new addition to Victoria’s notable public buildings. It has become a magnet for the world’s best cancer researchers and is testament to the skill and imagination of the sthDI + MCR architectural consortium.
The CEO of Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and VCCC Board Member, Dale Fisher, states that the Centre is “proud and beautiful,” when extolling the elegance of its functional workings, when she states that “there is nothing like this in the world,” and when she informs us that the building itself helps to attract and retain the best of international researchers.
As the Victorian Medal jury noted, in a world where research institutes and cancer hospitals compete to attract the best researchers, the architecture assists in establishing a compelling image for the VCCC. It is an exemplary building which will serve the Victorian community for decades to come.
Whether government-commissioned projects, or homes and private offices, this year’s winning projects put people and communities first.
The following is a full list of 2017 Victorian Architecture Award winners. Named Award and Architecture Award winners go on to compete in the National Architecture Awards, to be announced in Canberra in November.
2017 Victorian Architecture Awards – Winner List
Residential Architecture – Houses (New)
HAROLD DESBROWE-ANNEAR AWARD
Rose House | Baracco+Wright Architects
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS
Dark Horse | Architecture Architecture
House A | Andrew Walter
Seaberg | Kerstin Thompson Architects
Fish Creek House | Edition Office
COMMENDATIONS
True North | TANDEM design studio
South Melbourne Beach House | Topology Studio
Twig House | Leeton Pointon Architects + Interiors and Allison Pye Interiors
Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions)
JOHN AND PHYLLIS MURPHY AWARD
Sorrento House | Figureground Architecture
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS
Dorman House | Austin Maynard Architects
Perimeter House | MAKE Architecture
Shadow Cottage Daylesford | MRTN Architects
COMMENDATIONS
Alfred House | Austin Maynard Architects
Belmont House | Kennedy Nolan
Residential Architecture – Houses (Multiple Housing)
BEST OVEREND AWARD
RMIT Bundoora West Student Accommodation | Richard Middleton Architects (RMA)
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS
Assembly Apartments | Woods Bagot
COMMENDATION
Albert Street | DKO Architecture
Monash University Turner Building Student Accommodation | Jackson Clements Burrows Architects
Small Project Architecture
KEVIN BORLAND AWARD
South Melbourne Beach House | Topology Studio
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS
Balnarring Retreat | Branch Studio Architects
Casa de Gatos | WOWOWA Architecture & Interiors
COMMENDATIONS
2016 NGV ARCHITECTURE COMMISSION: Haven’t you always wanted…? | M@ STUDIO Architects
Shimmerlands | Ha – Architecture, Product & Environment with Ben Sibley, Architectural Craftsperson
Sound Cloud | Andrew Simpson Architects
Urban Design
JOSEPH REED AWARD
Frank Bartlett Library and Moe Service Centre | fjmt
ARCHITECTURE AWARD
Fitzroy Gardens Redevelopment Project | City of Melbourne City Design Studio
COMMENDATIONS
Reservoir Urban Nodes | Bellemo & Cat
Upper West Side | Cottee Parker Architects
Heritage Architecture
JOHN GEORGE KNIGHT AWARD
Albert Park College Environmental Arts Hub | Six Degrees Architects
ARCHITECTURE AWARD
Hiro-En House | Matt Gibson Architecture + Design
Interior Architecture
MARION MAHONY AWARD
Shadow House | Matt Gibson Architecture + Design, Mim Design
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS
Slack Melbourne Office | Breathe Architecture
The Gipson Commons, St Michael’s Grammar School | Architectus
COMMENDATIONS
Belmont House | Kennedy Nolan
Cox Box Office | Cox Architecture
Commercial Architecture
SIR OSBORN MCCUTCHEON AWARD
The Coppel & Piekarski Family Disability Respite Centre | Jackson Clements Burrows Architects
ARCHITECTURE AWARD
TarraWarra Cellar Door | Kerstin Thompson Architects
COMMENDATION
STREAT Cromwell | Six Degrees Architects
Public Architecture
WILLIAM WARDELL AWARD
Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre | sthDI+MCR (Silver Thomas Hanley, DesignInc and McBride Charles Ryan)
ARCHITECTURE AWARDS
Bunurong Memorial Park | BVN
Pomonal Community Hall | Workshop Architecture
Brimbank Community and Civic Centre | Lyons
COMMENDATION
Frank Bartlett Library and Moe Service Centre | fjmt
Educational Architecture
HENRY BASTOW AWARD
Albert Park College Environmental Arts Hub | Six Degrees Architects
ARCHITECTURE AWARD
Arts West, University of Melbourne | ARM + Architectus
The Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation – The University of Melbourne | Jackson Clements Burrows Architects
COMMENDATION
Good Samaritan Primary School – Nazareth (Yr 1 & 2) Learning Village | Harrison and White
Sustainable Architecture
ALLAN AND BETH COLDICUTT AWARD
South East Water | BVN
ARCHITECTURE AWARD
Birkenstock Australia Headquarters | Melbourne Design Studios (MDS)
Fitzroy Gardens Redevelopment Project | City of Melbourne City Design Studio
COMMENDATION
Monash University Building 56 Redevelopment | McGlashan Everist
Enduring Architecture Award
University South Lawn Underground Car Park | Loder and Bayly in association with Harris, Lange and Associates
COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture
COLORBOND® AWARD
Arts West, University of Melbourne| ARM Architecture + Architectus
COMMENDATION
The Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation – The University of Melbourne| Jackson Clements Burrows Architects
Melbourne Prize – Joint Winner
2016 NGV ARCHITECTURE COMMISSION: Haven’t you always wanted…? | M@ STUDIO Architects
Tanderrum Bridge | John Wardle Architects and NADAAA in collaboration
Regional Prize
Pomonal Community Hall | Workshop Architecture
Victorian Architecture Medal
Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre | sthDI+MCR (Silver Thomas Hanley, DesignInc and McBride Charles Ryan)