New Zealand Architecture’s TOP 20
New Zealand Architecture’s TOP 20
Twenty
projects have been recognised in the 2012 New Zealand
Architecture Awards. Proving that design quality is not
governed by the size of buildings or type of work, winners
in the country’s leading architectural awards programme
ranged from the Auckland Art Gallery to a Napier artist’s
studio, from a chapel in an inner-city church to a café on
the side of a mountain, and from an airport hotel to a
lakeside school.
“The standard of public and commercial
projects was very high,” says Hugh Tennent, the convenor
of the New Zealand Institute of Architects awards jury.
“The Awards show that, despite the financial constraints
we’re all facing, public bodies and private developers are
commissioning high-quality buildings.”
“It was also
good to see that architects are finding ways to deliver
great work in these tight times – as they
should.”
Tennent says several trends emerged from this year’s Architecture Awards, a demanding programme that entails the scrutiny of finalists by a jury of five leading architects, including one from Australia.
“There’s a greater effort going into improving urban environments and infrastructure,” says Tennent, “and a more sophisticated approach to repairing and developing our cities.”
These developments, Tennent says, are exemplified by two award winning Auckland projects, both designed by Architectus – the new transport hub at New Lynn, which has untangled local infrastructural knots by lowering a rail platform beneath ground level, and the Urban Design Framework for Wynyard Quarter, which represents “a significant advance in the thinking about occupying and enjoying our waterfronts”.
A second feature of the Architecture Awards is the
presence of projects instigated or enabled by Maori funders.
Te Wharewaka, a commercial building on Wellington’s
waterfront, designed by architecture+, and the Novotel
Auckland Airport, designed by Warren and Mahoney Architects,
convey in their design “a sense of what is physically and
culturally unique about New Zealand”.
The strength of architectural responses to powerful or sensitive settings was another theme of the Awards, and one which, Tennent says, offers a positive message to a nation often suspicious about the place of buildings in the landscape.
Tennent says an important element of the success of the Auckland Art Gallery, in which Sydney-based FJMT in association with local practice Archimedia have restored the existing gallery and added a “beautifully proportioned and stunningly appointed” new building, is “the well-handled connection with Albert Park”. The Auckland Art Gallery received Architecture Awards in both the public architecture and heritage categories.
A confident
treatment of the relationship between buildings and
landscape is also evident on two very different but equally
dramatic sites. On the Whakapapa skifield on Mt Ruapehu,
Harris Butt Architecture’s Knoll Ridge Café is a
“wonderful building,” Tennent says, “truly audacious
in its design and also in its construction, which was
carried out under very difficult circumstances”.
In
Queenstown, Babbage Consultants’ Remarkables Primary
School, Tennent says, lives up to the promise of its name.
Located on the shores of Lake Wakatipu, the state school
“not only brilliantly serves its pedagogical purpose,”
Tennent says, “but also provides a clearly identifiable
community place in an area not well supplied with
high-quality public architecture”.
An outstanding example of a built response to a tough urban environment is Anvil, an Auckland commercial building designed by Patterson Associates for a site on a perennially busy four-lane road.
Tennent says the judges were highly impressed by two Award winners using innovative timber structural technology – “a timely re-examination, given the reconstruction challenges in Christchurch, of the potential of our traditional building material”. Nelson’s NMIT Arts and Media Building, designed by Irving Smith Jack Architects, was commissioned as a test-case, multi-level timber building. “It has passed its exam with flying colours,” Tennent says.
In Auckland, the
MOTAT Aviation Display Hall, designed by Studio Pacific
Architecture, uses record-breaking spans of laminated veneer
lumber to provide a generous volume of space for a
collection of vintage aircraft.
While the Architecture
Awards mainly celebrate new buildings, they also acknowledge
significant conservation and restoration projects. The jury
praised the conservation of Wellington’s Government House,
carried out by Athfield Architects, pointing to the
“thorough research” and “detailed recording” behind
the revitalisation of an important heritage building, and
home of the country’s titular head of state.
At the other end of the architectural scale, Salmond Reed Architects deservedly won an Award, Tennent says, for the practice’s artful insertion of St Thomas’ Chapel, which was originally housed in a nineteenth century missionary ship, into St-Matthew-in-the-City Church in downtown Auckland, itself a recently restored heritage building.
This “little jewel” of was one of several small projects to receive Architecture Awards. The others were the light-filled studio for an artist fitted into a Napier garden by Ashley Cox Architects –“a delightful realisation of the art of architecture”, the Awards jury said – and a modest holiday house designed by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Chin Architects, inspired by the model of a tramping hut in a bush clearing.
Tennent says it was disappointing the Awards jury was not presented with examples of medium or high density projects. “These are building types we desperately need to be good,” he says, “if we are to persuade people there are alternatives to urban sprawl and the endless building of motorways”.
However, Tennent says, the high quality of house architecture was again evident, “even though this year’s standout houses didn’t strive to stand out”. Three of the four Award winners in the residential category are stained or coloured a recessive black, he notes, the exception being RTA Studio’s “innovative and playful” House for Five, an Auckland suburban home “that takes a relaxed approach to the complexity of family life”.
The three other Award-winning houses are all in coastal environments. Herbst Architects’ house at Piha, which the architects have called, poetically but also accurately, Under Pohutukawa, is, Tennent says, “designed with perfection and sited with great care – an iconic beach has been graced with an exquisite house”.
On Waiheke Island, Strachan Group Architects have designed what the Awards jury said is “a generous and liveable, well ordered and well ventilated house, which is successfully integrated with its natural surroundings”. Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects have won an award for a beach house on Northland’s Tutukaka Coast – “an assured house, all black against ocean blue, that sits confidently on its site”.
The last category, but not the least, decided by the Architecture Awards jury, is Enduring Architecture, that is, buildings that have stood the test of time. Two such Awards were made, one for the Lomas House in Hamilton, designed in the early 1950s by the late Peter Middleton. The house, the Awards jury said, “has gracefully kept pace with family life for more than half a century”.
The second Enduring Architecture Award went to the 1982 redevelopment of Otago Boys High School, which was undertaken by McCoy and Wixon Architects, under the design leadership of Ted McCoy. “The excellent and unaltered condition of McCoy’s buildings is a tribute both to the Architect and to a school that has refrained from tampering with them,” the Awards jury said.
Joining Hugh Tennent
on the Architecture Awards jury were architects Ivan Mercep,
Ginny Pedlow, Gary Lawson, and Melbourne-based John Wardle.
The jury will select one project from among the New
Zealand Architecture Award winners to receive the 2012 New
Zealand Architecture Medal, the top award given in any year
by the New Zealand Institute of Architects. That decision
will be announced at the Awards function in Wellington on 25
May.
Commercial Architecture
ANVIL, Mt Eden,
Auckland by Patterson Associates Limited
Knoll Ridge
Café, Whakapapa, Mt Ruapehu by Harris Butt Architecture Ltd
Novotel Auckland Airport by Warren and Mahoney
Architects
Te Wharewaka, Wellington by
architecture+
Heritage
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o
Tāmaki by FJMT + Archimedia architects in association
Government House Conservation, Wellington by Athfield
Architects
Planning and Urban Design
New Lynn
Transit-Oriented Development, Auckland by Architectus and
Architecture Brewer Davidson Limited in
association
Wynyard Quarter Urban Design Framework,
Auckland by Architectus
Public Architecture
Auckland
Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki by FJMT + Archimedia architects in
association
NMIT Arts and Media Building, Nelson by
Irving Smith Jack Architects Ltd
Remarkables Primary
School, Queenstown by Babbage Consultants
Limited
Residential Architecture – Houses
House for
Five, Grey Lynn, Auckland by RTA Studio
Tutukaka Beach
House, Northland by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
(Auckland) Ltd
Owhanake Bay House, Waiheke Island by
Strachan Group Architects – SGA
Under Pohutukawa,
Auckland by Herbst Architects Ltd
Small Project
Architecture
Mt Iron House, Wanaka by Crosson Clarke
Carnachan Chin Architects Ltd
St Thomas’ Chapel in St
Matthew-in-the-City, Auckland by Salmond Reed Architects
Limited
Studio for an Artist, Napier by Ashley Cox
Architect
Sustainable Architecture
MOTAT Aviation
Display Hall, Westmere, Auckland by Studio Pacific
Architecture
Enduring Architecture
Lomas House,
Hamilton by Peter Middleton
Otago Boys High School
Redevelopment 1982, Dunedin by McCoy and Wixon Architects
Ltd
2012 NEW ZEALAND ARCHITECTURE AWARDS: FULL CITATIONS
Commercial Architecture
ANVIL
by Patterson Associates Limited
Holding a corner on a
stretch of car-dominated road, Anvil is a strong building of
exceptional quality. Circulation, both of vehicles and
pedestrians, is handled masterfully. It is a pleasure to
discover a carpark that doesn’t seem to have been
commissioned by a panelbeater, and the ramped upper-level
walkway also provides a welcoming and generous approach to
the building’s robustly-designed tenancies. An assertive
response to a tough urban condition, Anvil stands up to its
immediate surrounds; if it is joined by a neighbour or two
promoting greater street-level interaction, it will also
ameliorate them.
Knoll Ridge Café by Harris Butt
Architecture Ltd
On Mt Ruapheu, at least one cloud has
proved to have a silver lining: a café on Knoll Ridge
destroyed by fire has been replaced with a dramatically
sited building that rewards, with interest, a two chair-lift
ascent. This is audacious architecture, realised in
collaboration with an ingenious engineer, intrepid builders,
and a client determined to make the most of a breathtaking
setting. The exterior is strong and formally poetic; the
400-seat interior, with its large, laminated pine structural
members, is just as impressive. All of the building’s
elements, from decks to kitchen to handrail details, have
received careful treatment. The building is a fine example
of architectural grace achieved under logistical pressure,
in an extreme alpine environment.
Novotel Auckland
Airport by Warren and Mahoney Architects
Conveniently
located, if not picturesquely sited, the Novotel Hotel rises
out of an Auckland airport carpark and transcends the
architectural standards of its environs. The Architect has
done well to accommodate the necessary program in the
available space, realising a direct and assertive building
while capitalising on opportunities to add distinctiveness
to an inevitably generic building type. Hotels are not easy
projects; here, elements such as the splayed legs on the
exterior structure and the sculptural stairway leading from
the lobby demonstrate a welcome determination to transform
amenity into an enlivening architecture.
Te Wharewaka
by architecture+
After 170 years of European settlement
Maori once more have a presence on Wellington’s
waterfront. Prickly and armour-plated, Te Wharewaka
assertively claims its place next to Victorian neighbours by
the lagoon in the Taranaki Wharf West precinct. The building
takes its name from the ceremonial waka it houses but, as a
contemporary hybrid of traditional Maori spaces, it also
accommodates and generates income from various commercial
uses. The strength of form generated by the confident
juxtaposition of hipped and gabled roofs and the staunch,
well-detailed steel cloak imposes coherence on multiple
programmatic requirements.
Heritage
Auckland Art
Gallery Toi o Tāmaki by FJMT + Archimedia architects in
association
With perseverance and commitment the
Architects have worked through the issues and surmounted the
difficulties attendant on conserving and adding to a
significant public building. The structure of the existing
1888 building has been strengthened, successive accretions
have been removed and galleries have been restored to their
original glory. Most impressively, the Architects have
achieved a flow through the entire Art Gallery while
acknowledging the distinctive character of its two
constituent parts, old and new.
Government House
Conservation by Athfield Architects
An excellent
exercise in conservation architecture has seen the Edwardian
building that has housed New Zealand’s head of state for
more than a century rendered fit for contemporary occupation
and use, and preserved as an important artefact of the
country’s colonial legacy. Exemplary documentation,
presenting thorough research into the building’s history
and detailed recording of the conservation process, has
guided the project’s impressive realisation. From rooms to
roof, on the exterior and throughout the interior, the
architectural manners exhibited at Government House are as
least as cultivated as those displayed by generations of the
building’s vice-regal inhabitants.
Planning and Urban
Design
New Lynn Transit-Oriented Development by
Architectus and Architecture Brewer Davidson Limited in
association
Designed as a hub for a catchment area
benefitting from improved public transport, the New Lynn
Transit-Oriented Development also performs a welcome
place-making function in a part of Auckland ill-served by
generations of car-focussed planning. By lowering the rail
track beneath road level, the Architects have untangled
local infrastructural knots and provided ample space for a
user-friendly platform. Laudably, art has been integrated
into this gritty subterranean environment in the form of GRC
relief panels, sculpted by Louise Purvis, which run along
both sides of the track. A successor to the noble tradition
of railway architecture, this project is a beacon of quality
in a sea of indifferent buildings and a benchmark for future
development.
Wynyard Quarter Urban Design Framework by
Architectus
The framework for the urban design of Wynyard
Quarter reveals an appreciation of the exciting
possibilities of this maritime precinct and a mature
understanding of the realities of Auckland development.
Benefitting from a design rather than a planning approach,
the framework represents a qualitative advance in the
thinking about the occupation and use of the Auckland
waterfront. Based on clearly articulated design principles,
intended to be sufficiently robust to both sustain and
survive development, the framework is already being fleshed
out with well-considered landscaping and architecture. This
is an auspicious beginning for an important precinct.
Public Architecture
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
by FJMT + Archimedia architects in association
The
Architects have successfully steered their
competition-winning design through a challenging
construction process to produce an outstanding work of
public architecture. Generous spaces, both inside the
building and around it, have been wrested from a constricted
site, and the sensitive treatment of the Gallery’s
relationship with Albert Park has yielded a series of
enjoyable architectural moments. The meeting of new and
existing structure is clearly expressed, navigation is
logical, exhibition spaces are assured and detailing
throughout is highly accomplished. The building satisfies
all of the requirements of a modern art gallery.
NMIT
Arts and Media Building by Irving Smith Jack Architects
Ltd
The winning entry in a design competition for a
test-case, multi-level timber building, Nelson’s NMIT
Building validates that initiative, satisfies the
programmatic requirements of the building’s users, and
establishes an exemplary design precedent in a growing
provincial city. An innovative structure of massive timber
elements delivers on the promise of confidence and
legibility proclaimed by the carefully articulated, glazed
street elevation, and provides an appropriate backdrop to
the tertiary arts and trades courses taught in the building.
The planning and detailing of the building, and the
selection of materials, is also eminently compatible with
the purpose of providing an economic and enjoyable learning
environment.
Remarkables Primary School by Babbage
Consultants Limited
An impressive and inspiring new state
school has followed upon the Architect’s mature and
confident ability to acknowledge but not be overawed by a
truly remarkable setting. Strung like a necklace across the
sloping site, the well-planned classrooms and supporting
spaces offer views and access to Lake Wakatipu, while
providing, on the sunken lee side, shelter from onshore
winds. While connection and containment are concepts that
have driven the design, community is the principle that has
animated the whole project. A committed board has been
closely involved in the creation of a clearly identifiable
community place in an area not over-endowed with
high-quality public architecture.
Residential
Architecture – Houses
House for Five by RTA
Studio
This family house has a supple plan that
generates, around a central courtyard, a surprising array of
enjoyable spaces. A long, screened street elevation that
makes outsize and playful reference to gabled neighbours
provides shelter and privacy, and allows for the admission
of light into living areas. While the design anticipates a
relaxed and sociable occupation, the contained, galley-like
kitchen indicates a departure from contemporary open-plan
orthodoxy. The house might be straight and narrow, but
it’s also refreshingly unconventional.
Tutukaka Beach
House by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects (Auckland)
Ltd
This assured house, all black against ocean blue,
sits confidently on its site, protected from coastal winds.
The holiday house is at once structured and relaxed, a blend
of qualities apparent in the generous verandah designed by
an Architect who understands the lifestyle of New Zealanders
at the beach. Inside, there is a sense of envelopment in
layers of space and, in planning moves such as the pulling
of the bedroom wing forward of the living areas, a
suggestion of surprise invoked to good and not gratuitous
effect.
Owhanake Bay House by Strachan Group
Architects – SGA
This is one of those happy occasions
when a house is more properly called a home. On a coastal
site, in a landscape progressively rehabilitated by the
clients, the Architect has designed a comfortable and
appropriate dwelling that is direct without being
directional. The house is generous and liveable, well
ordered and well ventilated, and successfully integrated
with its natural surroundings. Eminently fit for purpose,
the house may have even exceeded expectations; if it has
done so it is because the Architect and clients have clearly
proceeded in sympathy.
Under Pohutukawa by Herbst
Architects Ltd
From the road, this beach house, in its
opened-up summer configuration, reads as an encampment; up
close, it is experienced as a beautifully sited verandah.
The house is a beguiling essay in the relationship between
structure and setting, order and nature, requirements and
responsibilities. There is nothing extempore about the
building, which is designed and executed with perfectionist
exactitude, but it is also a highly successful exercise in
sympathetic placement: the pohutukawa among which the house
politely nestles are constantly and closely present. An
iconic beach has been graced with an exquisite house.
Small Project Architecture
Mt Iron House by Crosson
Clarke Carnachan Chin Architects Ltd
Sufficiency of space
and adequacy of amenity, along with economy of planning and
attention to detail, characterise this holiday house which
takes as its role model the Kiwi tramping hut in a bush
clearing. It is a pleasure to discover a modern vacation
home that so clearly renounces profligacy in favour of
design rigour and conceptual consistency. The simplicity of
the building is testimony to the resolved nature of the
ideas that generated it. Unfussy in form and eminently
habitable, the modestly-sized house is the best work of
architecture for miles around: in the context of its
suburban-type development, it reads as a conciliatory
gesture to the ineffable Central Otago landscape.
St
Thomas’ Chapel in St Matthew-in-the-City by Salmond Reed
Architects Limited
An historic work of maritime
ecclesiastical architecture has found terrestrial sanctuary
in a heritage religious building. The St Thomas Chapel,
originally a component of a nineteenth century ship
commissioned for the Anglican Church’s Melanesian Mission,
has been encased like a jewel in a well-crafted container
inside St Matthew-in-the-City. The box and its twin, which
houses a small kitchen, do not compete with the architecture
of the host building: a sympathetic Architect has achieved
an adroit reconciliation of difference and deference.
Studio for an Artist by Ashley Cox Architect
A simple
and singular strategy, and within that a series of good
decisions intelligently implemented, has produced an ideal
space in which to paint and draw. Defining a boundary to the
street, the portal-framed building steps down the sloping
contour of the site to produce three spacious platforms,
bathed in natural light from south-facing skylights which
echo the roof forms of the neighbouring cottage. Large
sliding windows frame views into the garden from which, as
evidenced by the works occupying the generous wallspace, the
artist draws considerable inspiration. The studio is a
delightful realisation of the art of architecture.
Sustainable Architecture
MOTAT Aviation Display Hall
by Studio Pacific Architecture
From the outset,
sustainable principles guided the design of this large hall
that provides maximum headroom for a significant collection
of historic aircraft. An admirable economy of structure,
achieved by means of Laminated Veneer Lumber (LVL)
clear-spans of impressive extent, has allowed for the
generous provision of naturally ventilated space. The
specification of locally produced LVL resulted from a
comprehensive life-cycle building analysis, including
empirical research into relative carbon balance and the
embodied energy of various structural options. This rigour
is consistent with the Architect’s thorough-going
sustainable approach to a project on a site requiring and
receiving careful environmental monitoring.
Enduring
Architecture
Lomas House by Peter Middleton
The Lomas
House is a fine building and also an inspiring architectural
story. Designed for a young family in the 1950s, at a time
when materials were rationed but optimism was far more
plentiful, the house has gracefully kept pace with that
family’s life for more than half a century. Frugal, but
never mean with its spatial allocation, the house on its
well-positioned site is cleverly and subtly arranged around
the framework of a simple grid. Over the years, it has
settled into a companionate relationship with the relaxed
and unfussy garden. Inhabited beautifully, altered little,
and maintained with care, the house is a case study in the
lasting benefits of a sympathetic relationship between
clients and Architect.
Otago Boys High School
Redevelopment 1982 by McCoy and Wixon Architects
Ltd
Completed in 1982, Ted McCoy’s strong suite of
buildings – a symphony in concrete – has survived nearly
30 years of schoolboy occupation in splendid state. The
quadrangle around the former green is a terrific composition
and a highly successful exercise in place-making. These
classroom blocks constitute a high-water mark in the career
of an outstanding New Zealand designer. With typically good
manners, the Architect ceded the high ground to the Gothic
Revival building that dominates the Otago Boys High School
campus, but responded to its Victorian confidence with
Modernist assurance. Nor did the Architect shy from
refurbishing the original building, cleverly inserting a new
theatre in its interior. The excellent and unaltered
condition of McCoy’s buildings is a tribute both to the
Architect and to a school that has recognised and respected
their quality.
ends