Category: breaking news

Inventive home wins big at Newcastle Architecture Awards

The 2016 winners of the Australian Institute of Architects’ Newcastle Architecture Awards have been revealed at a special ceremony at the Merewether Surfhouse on Thursday 17 March.

Sixteen projects from across the region received honours on the night with The Axis House by Jonathan Dawes in conjunction with EJE Architecture the overall winner, taking home the Award for Excellence.

The jury praised the ‘creative and inventive’ project which also won in the Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions) category and received the COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture – Commendation making it the most awarded project of the night.

‘Alterations can be a challenge when dealing with new and old, and so too collaborations between large and small architectural practices. The Axis House has executed these challenges perfectly; the result is a rewarding piece of architecture,’ the jury said.

A ‘meticulously crafted jewellery box’, Watt Space Gallery by Andrew Donaldson Architecture and Design, won both the Public Architecture and Small Project Architecture categories.

In awarding the gallery, the jury noted the project ‘is a successful example of clever planning and detailing within a constrained budget resulting in an intelligent, beautiful and light filled space that is not only a joy to be in but also harmoniously blends new and old’.

Other winning projects include The Gateway Commercial Development by CKDS Architecture for Commercial Architecture; Damascus Centre, St Paul’s High School by QOH Architecture for Educational Architecture; SDA Workplace by SDA Space Design Architecture for Interior Architecture; Urban Eclectic House by SDA Space Design Architecture for Residential Architecture – Houses (New); and Institute of Energy and Resources by EJE Architecture for Sustainable Architecture.

The jury awarded a total of eight Awards and thirteen commendations on the night. Projects that received an Award are now eligible for the NSW Architecture Awards which will be announced on Friday 1 July.
Full list of winning projects:

Award for Excellence

Winner – The Axis House by Jonathan Dawes in conjunction with EJE Architecture (Toronto)

Commercial Architecture

Award – The Gateway Commercial Development by CKDS Architecture (Newcastle)
Commendation – Club Maitland City by Terroir (Rutherford)

Educational Architecture

Award – Damascus Centre, St Paul’s High School by QOH Architects (Booragul)
Commendation – Institute of Energy and Resources by EJE Architecture (Shortland)

Heritage

Commendation – Masonic Hall Refurbishment by EJE Architecture (Speers Point)

Interior Architecture

Award – SDA Workplace by SDA Space Design Architecture (The Junction)
Commendation – The Gateway Fitout by CKDS Architecture (Newcastle)
Commendation – Mingara Leisure Group Corporate Offices by Graphite Architects (Tumbi Umbi)

Public Architecture

Award – Watt Space Gallery by Andrew Donaldson Architecture and Design (Newcastle)
Commendation – ANZAC Bridge Memorial Walk by EJE Architecture (Bar Beach)
Commendation – Newcastle Airport by SHAC (Williamtown)
Commendation – Newcastle Courthouse by Cox Richardson Architects (Newcastle)

Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions)

Award – The Axis House by Jonathan Dawes in collaboration with EJE Architecture (Toronto)
Commendation – Power House by SDA Space Design Architecture (Islington)

Residential Architecture – Houses (New)

Award – Urban Eclectic House by SDA Space Design Architecture (Hamilton East)
Commendation – Grasemere Way by Webber Architects (Warners Bay)

Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing

Commendation – Eclipse Residential Development by CKDS Architecture (Cook’s Hill)

Small Project Architecture

Award – Watt Space Gallery by Andrew Donaldson Architecture and Design (Newcastle)
Commendation – University of Newcastle Entry Canopies by CKDS Architecture (Callaghan)

Sustainable Architecture

Award – Institute of Energy and Resources by EJE Architecture (Shortland)

COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture

Award – University of Newcastle Entry Canopies by CKDS Architecture (Callaghan)
Commendation – The Axis House by Jonathan Dawes in conjunction with EJE Architecture (Toronto)

The best architecture from the Gold Coast and Northern Rivers celebrated at Regional Awards

Eleven projects from across the region have been honoured at the Australian Institute of Architects’ 2016 Gold Coast/Northern Rivers Regional Architecture Awards held Friday 26 February in the Gold Coast.

The Building of the Year was awarded to Griffith University Student Guild Uni Bar & Link Refurbishment by Push. The jury praised the project for the way it ‘links the main street and the heart of the campus in a well resolved correlation of uses and space’.

Two residential projects received special honours with Shaun Lockyer Architects’ Hinterland House winning the Gold Coast/Northern Rivers House of the Year. This project was celebrated by the jury because a ‘sense of place is achieved through the capturing of views, passive solar design, simplicity of section, spatial treatments and quality of detailing’. Regional Project of the Year was awarded to Shane Denman Architects for 2A Concrete.

In addition to the above accolades the three projects join eight others who were awarded Regional Commendations (listed below) by the jury with these projects now progressing to the Queensland State Architecture Awards to be announced on Friday 24 June in Brisbane.

Regional Commendations:

Architectural Project Architectural Practice Location
Casino Aboriginal Medical Service Kevin O’Brien Architects in association with AECOM Casino
Hinterland House Shaun Lockyer Architects Canungra
2A Concrete Shane Denman Architects Palm Beach
60s Modern Jamison Architects Burleigh Heads
Griffith University Student Guild Bar & Link refurbishment Push Southport
Monaco Renovation Paul Uhlmann Architects Broadbeach Waters
Stella Maris Church Straw & Dunne with PMG Architect Broadbeach
Dryandras Residence Paul Uhlmann Architects Casuarina Beach
Griffith University Red Zone, Gold Coast Campus Cox Rayner Architects Southport
ALTA Main Beach Willemsen Architecture Main Beach
Margaret Olley Art Centre Bud Brannigan Architects Murwillumbah

Spanish influencers join speaker line-up for 2016 National Conference

Two influential Spanish architects have joined the speaker line-up for the 2016 National Architecture Conference, How Soon is Now, taking place in Adelaide, 28-30 April.

Co-creative Directors Cameron Bruhn, Sam Spurr and Ben Hewett, have named ‘guerrilla architect’ Santiago Cirugeda of Seville and self-sufficiency advocate Vicente Guallart from Barcelona as additions to the comprehensive two-day program.

‘We’re very excited to announce two speakers from Spain, who come from opposing ends of architectural practice, but both show how architecture can impact on the creation of our urban environments,’ Sam Spurr said.

‘Vincent Guallart’s engagement across government, academia and commercial practice shows how working within establishments can generate fundamental and ambitious change at the scale of the city. He brought an ambitious and innovative approach to working as Chief Architect of Barcelona and also has a long interest in supporting architectural experimentation.

‘On the other hand, Cirugeda is passionately anti-institutions, whose “bottom–up” practice is formed to empower and support citizens in the construction of their public spaces. Aptly dubbed a “guerilla architect” by Al Jazeera, he utilises the skills and knowledge of architects to provocatively bypass and even harness the bureaucratic laws and regulations that control the city.’

The Spaniards join an already impressive list of local and international architects, educators and influencers who will deliver keynote addresses, panel conversations and project presentations as part of the conference.

Speaker line-up to date:

Santiago Cirugeda – Recetas Urbanas (Spain)
Vicente Guallart – Guallart Architects (Spain)
Amica Dall – Assemble (UK)
Sadie Morgan – dRMM Architects (UK)
Astrid Klein – Klein Dytham architecture (Japan)
Thomas Fisher – University of Minnesota (USA)
Julie Eizenberg – Koning Eizenberg Architecture (USA)
Nasrine Seraji – Atelier Seraji Architects and Associates (France)
Kevin Low – smallprojects (Kuala Lumpur)
John Wardle – John Wardle Architects (Aus)
Sandra Kaji-O’Grady – University of Queensland (Aus)
Tim Williams – Committee for Sydney (Aus)
Greg Mackie OAM – Ideas Wrangler (Aus)
Kerstin Thompson – Kerstin Thompson Architects (Aus)

Early bird registrations close on Thursday 10 March. More details available at wp.architecture.com.au/howsoonisnow

Winners of the Central Queensland Regional Architecture Awards revealed

The best new local projects have been honoured in the Australian Institute of Architects’ 2016 Central Queensland Regional Architecture Awards announced Friday in Yeppoon. 

The jury awarded Regional Commendations to seven projects (see list below) which will now progress to the coveted State Architecture Awards to be announced in Brisbane on 24 June.

In addition to a Regional Commendation, CQU Health Clinic Extension by Reddog Architects was presented with the J W Wilson Award for Building of the Year.

‘The CQU Health Clinic expansion integrates both the professional requirements of external parties, and a public interface, with the university’s learning objects. Sky-lighting, spatial interplay and a palette of natural colours bring a sophisticated quality to circulation spaces and a fresh sensibility to the healthcare typology,’ the jury noted.

St Brendan’s Catholic Primary School, Stage 1 by Bold Architecture + Interior Design was also awarded Regional Project of the Year in addition to a Regional Commendation.

Queensland 2016 Awards Jury Director, Michael Lavery (m3architecture), presented the Regional Commendations to the Central Queensland winners at the Yeppoon Town Hall on Friday 12 February.

Regional Commendations:

 

Architectural Project Architectural Practice Location
Gladstone State High

School – Year 7 Block

TVS architects Gladstone
CQU Health Clinic

Extension

Reddog Architects Pty Ltd North Rockhampton
Former Pioneer Shire

Council Building

Conrad Gargett Mackay
Mount Whitsunday

Residence

Push Mount Whitsunday
Rainbow Valley Early

Learning Centre

BEAT Architects Telina
St Brendan’s Catholic

Primary School, Stage 1

Bold Architecture &

Interior Design

Rural View
Anglican Church of St

James the Fisherman

ThomsonAdsett Yeppoon

Vale Paul Pholeros

On behalf of the Australian Institute of Architects, National President, Jon Clements has expressed great sadness at the death of advocate, humanitarian and Founding Director of Healthabitat, Paul Pholeros.

‘This is a very sad time and great loss for our community,’ Jon Clements said.

‘With his unwavering commitment to improving the lives of those living in disadvantaged communities around the world through his award-winning health and sanitation programs, Paul has long been a source of inspiration to us.

‘Anyone who had the opportunity to hear him speak about his work, could not help but be moved, changed in some fundamental way.

‘His exceptional work has made valuable impact in Indigenous and disadvantaged communities across Australia and around the world from Johannesburg to New York and will leave an enduring legacy on those who were fortunate enough to meet him and those who benefitted from his generosity.’

2014 Gold Medallists and friends Phil Harris and Adrian Welke of Troppo added:

‘In the politically charged world of Indigenous affairs, Paul never stepped back from simply telling it straight. As the best architect should be, he was a champion for his client. He was our mentor, our guide, and always our friend, with a twinkle in his eye and a self-deprecating quip at the ready.

‘It is impossible to imagine his lean and taught bower and studio high on Bilgola Plateau – the platform refuge shared with his partner Sandra – without his big presence. It was here, between months on the road, surrounded by bush and a big view, he would recharge, to continue his polite but unwavering 30 year battle against the antipathy and prejudice that precludes our first Australians in sharing our society’s riches of housing, health and education.

‘The torch will be carried on, for he has taught us well – but how well and with what authority is the question, and, for all of us, our individual challenge.’

Richard Leplastrier, 1999 Gold Medallist, shared his thoughts:

‘Dr Phol as he was lovingly known to so many of us, realised from the youngest age as a student that Aboriginal culture and the land was the spiritual backbone of this country.

‘From that time on, he unrelentingly pursued its sustenance through his brilliant work with Indigenous communities. The background financial support for his Healthabitat practices has been provided by a series of small, modest beautiful buildings done by him over the years … thus showing us an exemplary ethic. What an example. What a tour de force. What a life. What a loss. Game set and match Dr Phol.’

A Life Fellow of the Institute, Paul Pholeros, along with Healthabitat, was the winner of the UN Habitat and Building and Social Housing Foundation’s 2011 World Habitat Award.

He was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in 2007 for ‘service to the community by improving the living conditions and, consequently, the health of Indigenous communities through the design, development and improvement of housing and the surrounding living environment and working with, and creating employment for, local Indigenous people’.

In 2012, Paul and his Healthabitat colleagues were one of six teams that participated in Australia’s exhibition Formations at the Venice Architecture Biennale. Their contribution included a touring team consulting local Venetians about ways to improve their homes and educating the public about connections between housing design and health issues based on their World Habitat Award winning Housing for Health program.

Paul was a speaker at the 2015 Australasian Student Congress in Melbourne, the 2011 recipient of the Institute’s Leadership in Sustainability Prize, winner of a Special Jury Prize from the 2008 National Architecture Awards Jury for architectural contribution to Indigenous housing over 25 years and received the Royal Australian Institute of Architects’ President’s Award in 1994 for the publication of Housing for Health: Towards an improved living environment for Aboriginal Australians.

Droga Architecture Residency welcomes Finnish icon

Renowned Finnish architect and architectural philosopher, Juhani Pallasmaa will shortly arrive in Australia ahead of his Droga Architecture Residency.

A former juror for the Pritzker Architecture Prize and jury member for the extension of Sydney Modern, Pallasmaa will present a series of lectures around the country beginning at the Sydney Opera House on 23 February.

‘Juhani Pallasmaa is highly regarded worldwide for not only his architectural works but his contributions through lectures, seminars, books, exhibitions and philosophical reflections.

‘It is a great honour and a great opportunity to host Juhani as the next Droga Architect in Residence and we are excited by the wealth of expertise and inspiration he will bring as he tours the country,’ Jury Chair Brit Andresen said.

Pallasmaa’s lecture series, titled The Australian Lectures: Touching the World Through Architecture, will explore alternative directions for architecture, away from purely vision, form and aesthetics, drawing from philosophy, psychology, biology, neuroscience and the analysis of artistic phenomena.

Pallasmaa has practised architecture since the early 1960s, establishing his own office in 1983. In addition to architectural design, he has been active in urban, exhibition, product and graphic design.

An Emeritus Professor, he has taught and lectured widely in Europe, North and South America, Australia, Africa and Asia and has published books and numerous essays on the philosophy and critique of architecture and the arts in over thirty languages.

The Droga Architecture Residency invites international architects to participate in a three-month program encouraging the exploration of new approaches, the exchange of ideas, international collaboration and cross-fertilisation.

Managed by the Australian Institute of Architects Foundation, it is the first program of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere and is named after cultural philanthropist and supporter of the Institute, Daniel Droga, who generously gifted his award-winning Droga Apartment in Surry Hills for use as an architect residency.

For more information about the residency and associated events visit wp.architecture.com.au/foundation/current-residencies/

 

The Australian Lectures

Sydney – Opening Lecture
Tuesday 23 February, Sydney Opera House
ATMOSPHERE AND MOOD – feeling space and place

10 March – Melbourne
DWELLING IN TIME – the architectural meaning of time

31 March – Brisbane
IN PRAISE OF VAGUENESS – diffuse thought and peripheral vision

9 April – Canberra
EMPATHETIC IMAGINATION – embodied simulation in architecture

April (Date TBC) – Adelaide
COMPLEXITY OF SIMPLICITY – the inner structure of artistic imagery

13 April – Sydney
TRADITION AND NEWNESS – the meaning of artistic continuity

Australia Day Honours reward Institute Fellows

The Australian Institute of Architects congratulates Fellows John Gollings and Donald Goldsworthy on their receipt of Australia Day Honours.

Mr Gollings was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for ‘significant service to photography through documentation of iconic architectural landmarks in Australia and the Asia-Pacific region’.

John Gollings was made an Honorary Fellow of the Institute in 2004 and has received numerous Institute accolades including the 2013 William J Mitchell International Committee Prize, the 1990 and 1998 President’s Award and the 2008 Victorian President’s Prize.

In 2010, Gollings was Co-Creative Director of the Australian Pavilion of the Venice Architecture Biennale. Together with Ivan Rijavek he created the exhibition Now and When, which represented new paradigms for the city of the future: in 3D, juxtaposed with the current condition of Australian cities photographed from a helicopter. This exhibition attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors as it travelled around many major cities of Asia.

Mr Goldsworthy was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia ‘for service to architecture and urban design’.

A Fellow of the Victorian Chapter since 2010, Donald Goldsworthy established his own practice in 1995 providing consultant services across architecture, strategic planning, asset management, urban design and project procurement.

Throughout his career he has worked with the City of Greater Bendigo, the Department of Planning and Development for the Victorian State Government, and the Rehabilitation and Feasibility Branch for the Ministry of Housing.

Architects disappointed with ACT Government’s Mr Fluffy home replacement

The ACT Chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects is disappointed that the ACT Government has not adopted more recommendations for its Draft Territory Plan Variation (DV343).

Following the release of the ACT Government’s draft policy earlier in the year, the Institute recommended amendments that would address the limited supply of a variety of housing types across the city and reduce the pressure for unsustainable urban sprawl. However, the DV343 Code has been issued with only minimal changes to the draft.

‘The Mr Fluffy buyback scheme presents a rare opportunity to create innovative housing options for our growing, ageing population that also supports a sustainable future for our city.

‘The Institute believes the government has missed a never–to-be-repeated opportunity to deliver a long-term high quality design and sustainable planning policy for a growing and changing city,’ ACT Chapter President Andrew Wilson said.

Canberra needs alternative housing options to the traditional single dwelling. While DV343 has reduced the minimum allowable block size for dual occupancy, the process has been restricted by limiting the plot ratio to 35 per cent, compared to a 50 per cent ratio for a single house.

The government has also missed the opportunity to invest in master or precinct plans for groupings of Mr Fluffy sites. The Institute recommended a quality design process involving neighbour consultation that would allow for concepts that are currently restricted by the Territory Plan.

Innovative approaches like those explored last year in the successful ACT Government supported design competition New Experimental Architectural Typologies could include block amalgamations to enable duplexes and housing co-operatives resulting in more diverse communities.

The Institute wants to see the ACT Government improve DV343 to positively address urban change by providing varied housing options for all members of the community.

From the very small to the monumental, architecture at all scales celebrated at National Awards

The 2015 winners of the Australian Institute of Architects’ National Architecture Awards have been announced at a special ceremony in Brisbane on Thursday 5 November.

42 projects shared a total of 46 national honours in the coveted Awards program spanning 14 diverse categories. The jury, chaired by the Institute’s Immediate Past President David Karotkin, selected the winners after creating a shortlist from the 185 eligible projects following the Chapter Architecture Awards held earlier in the year.

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ARM Architecture’s Shrine of Remembrance – Galleries of Remembrance, the culmination of a masterplan for the Melbourne monument that was established 15 years ago, won the 2015 Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture.

The sought-after distinction was presented by the jury for the ‘masterstroke’ of cutting courtyards into the historic grassed mound, resolving ‘the programmatic challenges of turning a landmark monument into a major museum and gallery building while keeping intact the original urban design concept’.

‘This outstanding final stage reinstates the symmetry of the four quadrants of the Shrine’s original 1927 layout. What is remarkable about these latest additions is that they enhance the appreciation of the existing monument while confidently creating a new and intriguing visitor experience,’ the jury said.

At the other end of the scale, a ‘very small, neglected barn’ in Hobart has been successfully re-envisioned as a home by emerging architects Liz Walsh and Alex Nielsen (workbylizandalex). #thebarnTAS thoroughly impressed the jury taking out the top prize for Small Project Architecture, the Nicholas Murcutt Award and an Award for Heritage for the ‘brilliant solution’ that ‘overwhelmingly demonstrates that less can be much more’.

‘The historic structure has been lovingly retained – even its original shingles have been scrupulously cleaned and now form a ceiling to the upper mezzanine bedroom. This is an excellent example of how the limits and challenges of heritage and conservation can encourage inventive solutions. Regulatory, technical and structural requirements have not been seen as impediments but rather as creative possibilities,’ the jury stated.

Planchonella House, a Cairns home nestled in the treetops of the surrounding rainforest, by Jesse Bennett Architect Builder won the Robin Boyd Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (New).

‘Here is an architect/builder/inventor and an interior innovator at their combined best.

‘The house often appears raw because of the directness of its materials but it is highly sophisticated and inventive in its detailing. The combination is surprising and confident and it is this that sets this house apart,’ the jury noted.

The National Architecture Awards program has been held annually since 1981 and is one of the largest of its kind in the world. In 2015, there were 861 entries (753 projects) from around the country and abroad for the 14 national categories. Entries progress through Regional and Chapter Awards, with projects receiving awards and Named Awards at Chapter level being eligible for the National Awards.

Full list of winning projects:

Commercial Architecture

Harry Seidler Award – 50 Martin Place by JPW (NSW)
National Award – The GPT Group’s Wollongong Central by HDR Rice Daubney (NSW)
National Commendation – Equestrian Centre, Merricks by Seth Stein Architects (London) in association with Watson Architecture + Design (Melbourne) (Vic)

Educational Architecture

Daryl Jackson Award – Melbourne School of Design, The University of Melbourne by John Wardle Architects & NADAAA in collaboration (Vic)
National Award – UTS Science Faculty, Building 7 by Durbach Block Jaggers Architects & BVN (NSW)
National Commendation – Camperdown Childcare by CO-AP (Architects) (NSW)
National Commendation – Jeffrey Smart Building, University of South Australia by John Wardle Architects in association with Phillips/Pilkington Architects (SA)

Enduring Architecture

National Enduring Architecture Award – Council House by Howlett & Bailey Architects (WA)

Heritage

Lachlan Macquarie Award – Irving Street Brewery by Tzannes Associates (NSW)
National Award – The Abbey, Johnston Street, Annandale by Design 5 – Architects (NSW)
National Award – Coriyule by Bryce Raworth & Trethowan Architecture (Vic)
National Award – #thebarnTAS by workbylizandalex (Tas)

Interior Architecture

Emil Sodersten Award – Bankstown Library and Knowledge Centre by Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp (NSW)
National Award – The University of Queensland Global Change Institute by HASSELL (Qld)
National Commendation – Medibank by HASSELL (Vic)

International Architecture

Jørn Utzon Award – Pico Branch Library by Koning Eizenberg Architecture Inc. (United States)
Australian Award – Aman, Tokyo by Kerry Hill Architects (Japan)
Australian Award – Gloucestershire Garden Room by robert grace architecture (United Kingdom)

Public Architecture

Sir Zelman Cowen Award – Shrine of Remembrance – Galleries of Remembrance by ARM Architecture (Vic)
National Award – Adelaide Oval Redevelopment by Cox Architecture, Walter Brooke and Hames Sharley (SA)
National Commendation – Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital by Conrad Gargett Lyons (Qld)
National Commendation – Fiona Stanley Hospital – Main Hospital Building by The Fiona Stanley Hospital Design Collaboration (comprising HASSELL, Hames Sharley and Silver Thomas Hanley) (WA)
National Commendation – Margaret Court Arena by NH Architecture + Populous (Vic)

Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions)

Eleanor Cullis-Hill Award – Tower House by Andrew Maynard Architects (Vic)
National Award – Local House by MAKE Architecture (Vic)
National Award – Orama by Smart Design Studio (NSW)
National Commendation – Walter Street Terrace by David Boyle Architect (NSW)

Residential Architecture – Houses (New)

Robin Boyd Award – Planchonella House by Jesse Bennett Architect Builder (Qld)
National Award – Light House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture (NSW)
National Award – Sawmill House by Archier (Vic)
National Award – Villa Marittima, St Andrews Beach by Robin Williams Architect (Vic)
National Award – Balmoral House by Clinton Murray + Polly Harbison (NSW)

Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing

Frederick Romberg Award – Upper House by Jackson Clements Burrows Architects (Vic)
National Award – Studios 54 by Hill Thalis Architecture + Urban Projects (NSW)

Small Project Architecture

Nicholas Murcutt Award – #thebarnTAS by workbylizandalex (Tas)
National Commendation – LOVESTORY shop by MORQ (WA)
National Commendation – Moonlight Cabin by Jackson Clements Burrows Architects (Vic)

Sustainable Architecture

David Oppenheim Award – The University of Queensland Global Change Institute by HASSELL (Qld)
National Award – Bethanga House by tUG workshop (Vic)
National Award – Library at The Dock by Clare Design + Hayball (Architect of Record) (Vic)
National Commendation – Sustainable Buildings Research Centre (SBRC) – University of Wollongong by COX Richardson (NSW)
National Commendation – Cameraygal (formerly Dunbar building) by NSW Government Architect’s Office (NSW)

Urban Design

Walter Burley Griffin Award – NewActon Precinct by Fender Katsalidis Architects (ACT)
National Award – Monash University North West Precinct by Jackson Clements Burrows Architects in collaboration with MGS Architects (masterplan) (Vic)

COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture

Award – Adelaide Oval Redevelopment by Cox Architecture, Walter Brooke and Hames Sharley (SA)
Commendation – 50 Martin Place by JPW (NSW)

 

View the gallery of winning projects here.

Edmund Capon lists the ten finest buildings in the world

Edmund Capon will list what he believes are the ten finest buildings in the world when he delivers the 49th Griffin Lecture to the National Press Club on Wednesday 4 November.

Is it possible to bring the qualities that so distinguish these buildings to the ordinary office block In Australia?

‘I’ve chosen palaces of sumptuous indulgence, great monuments to faith, buildings which excite the imagination. They all have one thing in common, a very large dose of the useless,’ Capon says.

‘These are buildings which we really love and which have stood the test of time. But odd though it may seem, it is the useless that has instilled immortality into these great edifices.

‘If only we could embrace such imagination and spirit into the purely functional office blocks and residential towers,’ he says. ‘And while we’re about it let’s ban casinos altogether, if only for their inevitably crass appearance.’

Capon is Chair of the Australian Institute of Architects Foundation that fosters and promotes the creativity of architecture. He will argue that architecture can have a strong positive impact on our cities, and should be nurtured.

Edmund Capon’s Ten Finest Buildings:
• St Peters, Rome
• Pazzi Chapel (Brunelleschi), Florence
• Chateau de Vaux-Le-Vicomte, France
• Notre Dame du Haut, by Le Corbusier, Ronchamp, France
• Taj Mahal, Agra, India
• Temple of Heaven, Beijing
• The Royal Crescent, Bath, UK
• La Defense, Paris
• Opera House, Sydney
• Guggenheim, Bilbao

The Griffin Lecture is a major event for the ACT Chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects. Named in honour of Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahoney, it is now in its 49th year.

Previous speakers include Gough Whitlam, John Gorton, architects Roy Grounds and Romaldo Giurgola, historian Manning Clarke, and Lord Mayor Lucy Turnbull.