In a year that has seen Australians interact more with their immediate built environment than ever before, projects that go above and beyond, enlivening their surroundings, have received the nation’s top architectural honours.
The 2020 Australian Institute of Architects’ (AIA) National Architecture Award recipients, announced during a live-streamed event last night, epitomise the power of design to deliver enduring community value.
Jury Chair and Immediate Past National President, Professor Helen Lochhead, said 44 projects were recognised, 25 with national awards and 19 with commendations.
“Projects at this level are all accomplished, but it was the projects that could demonstrate their value beyond the limits of the brief or the confines of the site that the Jury selected for national recognition,” Prof Lochhead detailed.
“Creative adaptation, along with social and environmental sustainability featured strongly as themes running through this year’s award-winning projects.”
“In the context of the pandemic and a rapidly changing climate, it is clear that we need to be designing in new ways and many of these projects show that architects are uniquely positioned to adapt and meet these challenges,” she said.
“It was encouraging to see housing projects of all types challenging expectations and delivering high-quality buildings imbued with amenity and delight, even with limited means.”
Projects in New South Wales dominated the fiercely competitive New Houses category this year, while Victorian and South Australian projects featured in the Multiple Housing and Alteration and Additions categories.
Two strikingly different homes, one on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, the other nestled in East Albury, shared the prestigious Robin Boyd Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (New).
The Jury praised Peter Stutchbury Architecture’s Basin Beach House as the product of “a practice at the top of its game” that maintained “a gentle decorum befitting this ecologically sensitive context”.
They added that the home “demonstrates a clear synergy between client and architect, reinforcing the edict that with a terrific client often comes great architecture.”
Meanwhile, East Street by Kerstin Thompson Architects was awarded for “its consideration of climate, its response to a bushfire-prone context, and the desire to capture the rural setting and superb mountain ranges in the distance” made a living environment “both evocative and finely crafted”.
This year’s recipient of the Nicholas Murcutt Award for Small Project Architecture, For Our Country by Kudjla/ Gangalu artist Daniel Boyd in collaboration with Edition Office was particularly noteworthy.
“The task of adequately acknowledging Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander diggers, within the shadows of the Australian War Memorial, brought with it much responsibility,” the Jury observed.
“For Our Country is a simple concept, expertly executed with precision and clarity while concealing a degree of complexity in thinking not immediately apparent.”
Two projects jointly received the Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture – Marrickville Library by BVN and the Anzac Memorial Centenary Extension by Johnson Pilton Walker with the NSW Government Architect.
The library also received the David Oppenheim Award for Sustainable Architecture.
It is a standout example of the demonstrable public value exceptional design can deliver with the client saying, “BVN have created a library that is both breathtakingly beautiful and outstanding from a functional perspective.”
The transformation of the old hospital site has already had measurable community benefits, increasing visitor numbers by nearly 100 per cent and enabling 20,000 new books to be added to the collection.
Phoenix Central Park by Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects was another multi-award-winning project. It received both the Harry Seidler Award for Commercial Architecture and the Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture.
The client said the brief for this building was “an open invitation to create something as close to the perfect ideal of architecture itself – the beauty of space and the poetry of light; the pleasure of use and the magic of materials.”
The Jury also applauded the resulting gallery and performance space, that is the vision of prominent philanthropist Judith Neilson, as “a superb collaboration” that has “socially, economically and culturally rejuvenated the southern end of the city of Sydney and beyond.”
Heritage was the third of three categories where the named award has been shared this year, with two Tasmanian projects proving of equally high calibre.
Bozen’s Cottage by Taylor & Hinds Architects, which the Jury says is now ready “for another 180 years of comfortable habitation” has given the client, in their words, “solace, enchantment and joy”.
Moreover, Core Collective Architects’ restoration of Hollow Tree House and its stables was honoured “for the shared vision of an inspired client and an adept architect”.
Professor Lochhead commended all participants in this year’s awards, congratulating the winners and thanking all the architects and their clients.
“The National Architecture Awards represent one of the Institute’s most important advocacy programs, in which we acknowledge and celebrate the creative capacities of our profession and the enduring value that outstanding architecture brings to people’s lives,” she said.
Professor Lochhead was joined on the Jury by Jefa Greenaway, Jennie Officer, Kerry Clare and Tim Greer. More information on the Jury can be found here.
Winners of the 2020 Australian Institute of Architects’ National Architecture Awards
COMMERCIAL ARCHITECTURE:
- The Harry Seidler Award for Commercial Architecture | Phoenix Central Park | Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects| NSW
- National Commendation for Commercial Architecture | Three Capes Track Lodges | Andrew Burns Architecture| TAS
- National Commendation for Commercial Architecture | Daramu House | Tzannes| NSW
- National Commendation for Commercial Architecture | 9 Cremorne St | Fieldwork| VIC
EDUCATIONAL ARCHITECTURE
- The Daryl Jackson Award for Educational Architecture | Ian Potter Southbank Centre, University of Melbourne | John Wardle Architects |VIC
- National Award for Educational Architecture | Curtin University Midland Campus | Lyons with Silver Thomas Hanley | WA
- National Award for Educational Architecture | MLC School Senior Centre | BVN | NSW
- National Commendation for Educational Architecture | Carlton Learning Precinct COLA | Law Architects | VIC
ENDURING ARCHITECTURE
- National Enduring Architecture Award | Palm Garden House | Richard Leplastrier | NSW
HERITAGE
- The Lachlan Macquarie Award for Heritage (joint winner) | Bozen’s Cottage | Taylor & Hinds Architects | TAS
- The Lachlan Macquarie Award for Heritage (joint winner) | Hollow Tree House | Core Collective Architects | TAS
- National Award for Heritage | Regent Theatre, Melbourne |Lovell Chen | VIC
INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE
- The Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture | Phoenix Central Park | Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects | NSW
- National Award for Interior Architecture | Grant Pirrie House | Virginia Kerridge Architect | NSW
- National Commendation for Interior Architecture | Napier Street for Milieu | Freadman White | VIC
INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE
- The Jørn Utzon Award for International Architecture | The Arroyo Affordable Housing | John Koning Eizenberg Architecture |
PEOPLE’S CHOICE
- The 2020 People’s Choice winner |Outside [the] box | Troppo Architects | SA
PUBLIC ARCHITECTURE
- The Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture (joint winner) |Anzac Memorial Centenary Extension | Johnson Pilton Walker with the NSW Government Architect | NSW
- The Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture (joint winner) |Marrickville Library | BVN | NSW
- National Commendation for Public Architecture | Parks Victoria Albert Park Office and Depot | Harrison and White with Archier | VIC
- National Commendation for Public Architecture | State Library Victoria Redevelopment | Architectus + Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects| VIC
RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE – HOUSES (ALTERATIONS AND ADDITIONS)
- The Eleanor Cullis-Hill Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions) |Redwood | Chenchow Little | NSW
- National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions) | Outside [the] box | Troppo Architects | SA
- National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Houses (Alterations and Additions) |RaeRae House | Austin Maynard Architects| VIC
RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE – HOUSES (NEW)
- The Robin Boyd Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (New) (joint winner)| Basin Beach House |Peter Stutchbury Architecture |NSW
- The Robin Boyd Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (New) (joint winner)| East Street |Kerstin Thompson Architects | NSW
- National Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (New) | Glebe House | Chenchow Little | NSW
- National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Houses (New) | Breezeway House | David Boyle Architect | NSW
RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE – MULTIPLE HOUSING
- The Frederick Romberg Award for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing| Studio Apartments | Hill Thalis Architecture + Urban Projects | NSW
- National Award for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing| Napier Street for Milieu | Freadman White | VIC
- National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing| Salisbury Townhouses | NTF Architecture | VIC
- National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing| Gillies Hall | Jackson Clements Burrows Architects | VIC
- National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing| Verve Residences | CKDS Architecture with Hill Thalis Architecture + Urban Projects | NSW
SMALL PROJECT ARCHITECTURE
- The Nicholas Murcutt Award for Small Project Architecture |For Our Country | Edition Office and Daniel Boyd | ACT
- National Award for Small Project Architecture | In Absence | Edition Office and Yhonnie Scarce | VIC
- National Commendation for Small Project Architecture | Protagonist | Cumulus Studio | VIC
- National Commendation for Small Project Architecture | Marsden Park Amenities | CHROFI | NSW
SUSTAINABLE ARCHITECTURE
- The David Oppenheim Award for Sustainable Architecture |Marrickville Library | BVN | NSW
- National Commendation for Sustainable Architecture| Pingelly Recreation and Cultural Centre | iredale pedersen hook architects with Advanced Timber Concepts Studio | WA
- National Commendation for Sustainable Architecture | Mon Repos Turtle Centre | KIRK | QLD
URBAN DESIGN
- The Walter Burley Griffin Award for Urban Design | Metro North West | Hassell, in collaboration with Turpin Crawford Studio and McGregor Westlake Architecture | NSW
- National Award for Urban Design | Campbell Section 5 Master Plan | Hill Thalis Architecture + Urban Projects | ACT
- National Commendation for Urban Design | Bridge of Remembrance | Denton Corker Marshall | TAS
COLORBOND® AWARD FOR STEEL ARCHITECTURE
- National COLORBOND® Award for Steel Architecture | Carlton Learning Precinct COLA | Law Architects | VIC
- National COLORBOND® Commendation for Steel Architecture | Bankwest Stadium | Populous | NSW