2011 NZ Architecture Awards Celebrate the Best Work
20 April, 2011
2011 New Zealand Architecture Awards celebrate the best work by New Zealand’s Architects
Buildings ranging from an office tower in Auckland to an opera house in Oamaru, from houses on Waiheke Island to an apartment in New York City, and from a railway station in Newmarket to a bus shelter in Queenstown, are among 24 projects recognised in the 2011 New Zealand Architecture Awards, New Zealand’s premier architecture competition.
A slick new heliport in Onehunga, a bold extension to the City Gallery in Wellington, a bravura visitor centre for the historic Waitomo Glowworm Caves, and a serene Hawkes Bay house designed by Sir Miles Warren in the 1970s were among the winners in the New Zealand Institute of Architects’ official awards programme.
The New Zealand Architecture Awards indicate the breadth of work undertaken by the country’s architects, and offer a snapshot of the state of the country’s architecture, says Awards jury convenor, Wellington architect Hugh Tennent.
“The Awards are evidence that New Zealand architecture is in a healthy and vibrant state, despite current economic and financial difficulties,” says Tennent.
“We were particularly impressed with some brilliant public and commercial buildings. The Birkenhead Library and Community Centre is a wonderful community asset, St Kentigern School Jubilee Sports Centre is very cleverly sited, and the high-rise at 21 Queen Street shows that sustainability and commerce can be reconciled.”
Another strong category in Awards was
residential architecture, Tennent says.
“Highly
accomplished houses are being designed by New Zealand
architects, often in beautiful settings. New Zealanders
traditionally have prized landscapes over buildings, but
architecture and the environment shouldn’t be at odds.
“Houses like those designed by Mitchell and Stout, Patterson Associates and Fearon Hay on Waiheke Island, and by Stevens Lawson at Te Mata and Wanaka, and the Dunedin eco-sanctuary designed by Architectural Ecology, prove architecture can be appreciated in the landscape in its own right.”
As well as recognising new work, the jury gave Awards to older buildings of enduring worth.
“The Michael Fowler Centre in Wellington is nearly 30 years old and the Freyberg Pool was built in the 1960s, but they still feel modern and they’re still enjoyed by the community. They’re integral to the Wellington cityscape.”
The jury also acknowledged two buildings of even earlier vintage, the original Supreme Court in Wellington and the Oamaru Opera House.
“The Supreme Court is a very well done restoration job, while the Oamaru Opera House is an excellent example of clear, unfussy adaptive re-use,” Tennent says. “The town should be very proud of what it and its architects have achieved.”
One message the Awards send, Tennent says, is that architectural quality is not dependent on building scale. Several Awards were given in the small project category. Appropriately enough, one went to an Auckland building commissioned by Plunket, the organisation that cares for our smallest citizens.
The New Zealand Architecture Awards jury, comprising Hugh Tennent, Auckland architects Marshall Cook and Daniel Marshall and international juror, Sydney architect Camilla Block, made awards in 10 categories. Two projects received two awards – 21 Queen Street (Commercial Architecture and Sustainable Architecture) and the Supreme Court of New Zealand (Heritage and Interior Architecture).
The New Zealand Architecture Awards jury will select an overall winner from the recipients of New Zealand Architecture Awards. That winner, who will receive the 2011 New Zealand Architecture Medal, will be announced on 20 May.
2011 New Zealand Architecture Award winners in their categories, with abridged Award citations:
Commercial Architecture
Auckland Heliport, Onehunga, Auckland
Architect:
Maxcey Architects Ltd
“Bringing transparency and
translucency to internal walls and the operable southern
façade, the Architect has designed a building that
celebrates flight and flying machines.”
21Queen
Street, Auckland Central
Architect: Peddle Thorp Aitken
Limited
“A Cinderella-like transformation of an
unremarkable but fundamentally sound building into a
graceful tower that enhances the cityscape of downtown
Auckland Commercial Architecture.”
Waitomo
Glowworm Caves Visitor Centre, Otorohanga,
Waikato
Architect: Architecture Workshop Ltd
“Standing in counterpoint to the subterranean
experience that awaits its visitors, the building has a
poetic quality that sustains multiple readings – as
hinaki, or eel trap, for example, or cave of
light.”
Enduring Architecture
Foster House,
Havelock North
Architect: Warren and Mahoney Ltd
“All elements, built and natural, cohere and
complement each other to produce a quiet and calm
effect.”
Freyberg Pool, Wellington
Architect: King
and Dawson
“Swimmers in Wellington will often be
grateful for a building around them, and always be thankful
for the modest wonder that is the Freyberg Pool.”
Michael Fowler Centre, Wellington
Architect: Warren
and Mahoney Ltd
“Drawing on, and learning from, their
experience at Christchurch Town Hall, the Architects
produced a building with a lofty auditorium, boldly
cantilevered balconies, state-of-the-art acoustic
performance and perfected sightlines.”
Heritage
Oamaru Opera House, Oamaru
Architect: Williams
Ross Architects
“In this perfectly pitched project, a
fine but neglected provincial opera house has been
successfully redeveloped as a magnificent resource for its
town.”
Supreme Court of New Zealand,
Wellington
Architect: Warren and Mahoney Ltd
“The
building’s history has been celebrated, while the
insertion of contemporary furniture has allowed functional
and relevant occupation.”
Interior
Architecture
Supreme Court of New Zealand,
Wellington
Warren and Mahoney Ltd
“The interior of
the court is an extraordinary room displaying, in its
joinery and execution, a high level of refined
craftsmanship.”
International Architecture
Tribeca Loft, New York
Architect: Fearon Hay
Architects Ltd
“In this sophisticated example of
architectural interventionism, bedrooms created as elevated
glass cases have been inserted into the shell of a New York
apartment to produce spaces with a delicate and ethereal
quality.”
Public Architecture
St Kentigern
School Jubilee Sports Centre, Remuera, Auckland
Architect: Architectus
“Some architectural conjury
– more vanishing act than magic trick – has been
deployed on this project. The burying of a large volume into
a slope between two sports fields has unlocked the potential
of the site.”
City Gallery Wellington, Civic Square,
Wellington
Architect: architecture+
“The extension
and now second alteration of the original building is a
case-study in the successful adaptation of heritage
structure and evidence of a highly-developed understanding
of urban space.”
Birkenhead Library & Civic Centre,
Birkenhead, Auckland
Architect: Archoffice
“Textured surfaces and dappled light help to realise
the Architect’s idea that the experience of reading a book
in the library might be akin to reading a book in a
tree.”
Residential Architecture – House
Island Retreat, Waiheke Island
Architect: Fearon
Hay Architects Ltd
“The house is rather severe in
appearance. However, this austerity is alleviated by
occupation, as the inhabitants move within a loose courtyard
conceived as a camping space and the taut boxes open up to
reveal refined interiors.”
Waiheke Island House, Waiheke
Island
Architect: Mitchell & Stout Architects
Ltd
“The house offers several extraordinary moments:
the ‘thinking room’, a double-height space for music and
contemplation so arresting that one’s breathing changes
upon entry; the guest sleeping areas, tiny screened spaces
reminiscent of Ryokan architecture and also suggestive of
tree huts; and the brightly yellow main bedroom. This is a
house that engages with the spirit as well as all the
senses.”
Local Rock House, Waiheke Island
Architect: Patterson Associates Ltd
“The hard, good
looks of the house are softened by the texture of the local
rock, with no sacrifice to the restrained refinement of the
composition.”
Te Mata House, Havelock
North
Architect: Stevens Lawson Architects Ltd
“A
recessive, black form provides shelter from the wind and
sequential framed views. Art is important to this project:
the house, which itself has a sculptural quality, was always
envisaged as a repository for artworks, and a cleverly
striated plan allows the clients’ collection to be
incorporated into both rooms and circulation areas.”
Te Kaitaka – Lake Wanaka Retreat, Wanaka
Architect:
Stevens Lawson Architects Ltd
“The building, which is
located on the shores of Lake Wanaka, possesses a sculptural
quality that mirrors the surrounding landforms and
mountains.”
Residential Architecture – Multiple
Housing
Te Puni Village, Victoria University of
Wellington
Architect: Architectus
“A dense
programme is cleverly resolved in this facility providing
student accommodation and communal spaces on a steep slope
overlooking the city.”
Small Project
Architecture
Parakete Ora, Sandringham Plunket,
Sandringham, Auckland
Architect: SGA Ltd – Strachan
Group Architects
“A simple form and straightforward
economy of construction testifies to an understanding of New
Zealand lightweight building traditions and techniques. This
sympathetic building is an excellent introduction to
architecture for some of our youngest citizens.”
Kapiti Retreat, Raumati South
Architect: Geoff
Fletcher Architects Ltd
“A building reduced to its
essence, this little beach house is testament to the virtue
of sufficiency. Simple and pleasurable, it has everything
one needs, and no more.”
iPAD at Porikapa Beach,
Porikapa Beach, Taranaki
Architect: Architex New Zealand
Ltd
“This is a fine specimen of that elusive species,
the successful modular house. No space is wasted in this
inventive building.”
Sustainable
Architecture
21Queen Street, Auckland
Central
Architect: Peddle Thorp Aitken Limited
“A
1970s commercial building, tired but by no means exhausted,
has been given a new and more profitable lease of life.”
Orokonui Ecosanctuary Visitor Centre,
Dunedin
Architect: Architectural Ecology Ltd
“The
function of the facility is celebrated by the architecture,
which provides a commanding space overlooking the protected
regenerating flora and oriented towards significant
landforms.”
Urban Design
Newmarket Railway
Station, Newmarket, Auckland
Architect: Opus Architecture
and Herriot+Melhuish:Architecture in association
“On a
technically demanding site, the Architects have skilfully
handled the programme to produce an urban room that uplifts
the journey for the city’s rail users.”
Frankton Bus
Shelter and Public Toilets, Queenstown
Architect: Mary
Jowett Architects Ltd
“This carefully considered
project is a most welcome community asset, offering shelter
and public amenity with style and delightful
straightforwardness.”
ENDS